1 / 38

Re search ing: Helping Students navigate a mountain of knowledge

Re search ing: Helping Students navigate a mountain of knowledge. Digital Learning Series Digital Citizen Skills - Librarian Edition. Questions?. At anytime during the presentation please feel free to key in a question in the chat window. I will read and respond as they come in!

euclid
Download Presentation

Re search ing: Helping Students navigate a mountain of knowledge

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Researching: Helping Students navigate a mountain of knowledge Digital Learning Series Digital Citizen Skills - Librarian Edition

  2. Questions? At anytime during the presentation please feel free to key in a question in the chat window. I will read and respond as they come in! If I am going to fast please help me to press pause!

  3. What does it mean to be a 21st Century learner?

  4. Challenge Based Learning

  5. Critical Thinking Skills

  6. Inquiry Based Learning

  7. Connected Learning

  8. Project Based Learning

  9. The “4Cs” • collaboration, communication, critical thinking, & creativity • Think … How can I as a librarian accommodate the 4Cs?

  10. Changing face of education. • Students are not just looking for an answer anymore. • We are asking students to look at the facts, think, make judgments and share their findings. (more of this in the inquiry presentation I am sure!) • This is where we as teachers and librarians can play a huge role.

  11. Digital Citizenship

  12. In light of searching • If it can be googled is it worth learning? • Is googlingdumbing us down? Points to ponder as a result of a discussion with George Krahn (aka Joe).

  13. Learning to search • One can not assume a student knows how to search. • Often they don’t even question the search results– if it’s on the internet it must be true! • Often they never consider the validity or authenticity of a website.

  14. Searching • There is a strong need to explicitly teach search skills to students. • They need to know legitimate online research involves much more than 10 seconds with Google and copy-pasting the Wikipedia links. • Do not assume anything.

  15. Starting with spears! • An ancient tools project. Students are expected to build a tool that early humans may have constructed and used.

  16. Ask no questions • How can I go about making an ancient spear for my social studies project? • Every word is included in a search. • Students need to think about refining a search to the most important words for the topic • Well thought search  ancient spears materials

  17. Getting rid of the unwanted • A basic search of spears • A better search spear –britney

  18. The Exact Phrase • Want to be more specific? • A search for ancient spears would find all the pages of both or either term. • Add quote around words and Google searches for that exact phrase. • ie. “ancient spears” • At times the results differences can be subtle with the non quote top hits simply being more general.

  19. A needle in a hay stack! • Imagine searching for someone named Michael Kenny Jackson. • Try with or without the quotation marks (“ ”) – any difference?

  20. Search word precision is key! • To the student explicitly … • Precise key terms and eliminating unwanted key terms (-) generates great search results.

  21. Refining the results further • To keep our search confined to the field of education we may also add site: in our search • for a search of all education sites • site:edu spears – yields articles on spears from educational .edu sites only. • for a search of a single site • site:cbc.ca spears – yields articles on spears from cbc.ca only.

  22. More on refining your search • Google search tricks explained.* • Tips for searching like a pro from Google. • Google made Classroom posters (the first and last one are good!) Print and post!

  23. More searching tips • Watch Google’s search suggestions assistant for proper wording and keyword suggestion. • Great for humor as well.

  24. Narrowing the search • Google has a pile of interesting ways to search. You can even narrow your search by using the left side search options or clicking on the advanced search on settings icon. • Ie. File type or currency. • Consider a visual media view using What do you love? (by Google) • http://www.wdyl.com/# • eg.

  25. Go even deeper … • How proper online research works. • Help your students become better searchers with lesson plans and activities from google. • http://www.google.com/insidesearch/searcheducation/index.html

  26. Beyond google search • Consider one of these search tools the next time a student asks for assistance to look something up. • http://duckduckgo.com/ (a non tracking search) • The best of 2012 search engines • Search engines for kids – awesome list

  27. Assessing Web Site Credibility • Often the best way to teach website credibility is to show by example. • For example if students are asked to research an Endangered Species of their choice …

  28. Bogus site http://www.sudftw.com/jackcon.htm

  29. Credible site http://worldwildlife.org/species

  30. The concept of Credibility • Credibility criteria. The list may include: • Authorship – Author vs. Authority • perspective • consistency with experts • documentation of sources • currency • mechanics • Usability • Evaluating Web Site Credibility • Full teacher tool kit available @ Learn Alberta http://www.learnalberta.ca/content/ssmt/html/assessingwebsitecredibility_mt.html

  31. Tools to determine Web Site Credibility • Tools to determine Web Site Credibility are listed on

  32. Sask Learning’s Online Databases • http://www.education.gov.sk.ca/ • A nice collection of Magazines, Journals and Newspapers that are credible. • Many of the sites are only accessible within our schools.

  33. Consider using sweetsearch • Sweet Search is a search engine for students that searches 35,000 websites that research experts, librarians and teachers have evaluated and approved. • http://www.sweetsearch.com/

  34. Citing Websites http://www.bibme.org/

  35. Citing Websites http://www.easybib.com/

  36. Questions? • As learning technologists we are eager to assist you as well: • Small steps to becoming cybrarians! • Springshare by Saskatoon Public • There is plenty more on Digital Citizenship as well!

  37. @jrswanster • Find this presentation @ ubershare.wikispaces.com/libraries!

  38. Cited sources • http://leadinginnovation2012.wikispaces.com/Digital+Citizenship • http://nets-implementation.iste.wikispaces.net/Digital+Citizenship • http://www.byrdseed.com/teaching-search-skills/ • http://www.learnalberta.ca/content/ssmt/html/assessingwebsitecredibility_mt.html • http://netforbeginners.about.com/od/navigatingthenet/tp/How-to-Properly-Research-Online.htm

More Related