Transcript English

Search Techniques
A Module of the CYC Course
Online Search and Information Literacy
Common Terms
• Internet is a series of computers connected
together to share information. The World
Wide Web is a subset of the Internet.
• A “URL” or “Web Address” is where a page is
located.
• A browser (such as Internet Explorer or
Firefox) is a software program that allows easy
use of the web.
• “Home Page” is a start page or 1st page of a
website.
First Mistake to Avoid
• Typing the wrong things in the wrong boxes.
– Use the address box when you have a web address.
– Use the subject search box when you don’t know a specific
web address for the information you’re looking for.
The Address Box
The Search Box
Search Methods
• Search Engines
• From search results:
– Trim back a URL
– Follow links from a search result
• Search within a website
Search Engines
• Search Engine Examples
– Google - http://google.com
– Bing – http://bing.com
• Use keywords (not full sentences) to search
millions of pages.
• In Google results, “sponsored links” are
advertisements. Sometimes they are useful,
sometimes not, but always keep in mind they
showed up in your results because they paid
to be there.
• Each search engine has a help page if you
need suggestions on how to conduct your
search.
Trim Back a URL
• Activity – Conduct any search
• Choose a result with a long URL and remove
all text in the address bar after the top level
domain (such as .com, . org, .net)
• Press your enter key.
• What did you find?
Search Within a Website
• Activity – find out what is meant by “urban
legend”.
• Search for “urban legend”.
• Choose the Snopes result.
• Click around inside snopes.com to see if you
can find an explanation or definition.
Find it!
• Who won the world cup in 1978?
Find it!
• What are the symptoms of diabetes?
Find it!
• Find the nearest outlet stores.
Sources
• This curriculum was adapted from a workshop
created by N. Riesgraf for the Hibbing Public
Library (MN). Funding provided by IRRRA Do
I.T. Community Technology Awareness
Program. Updated March 2004. Revised for
Jacksonville Public Library Dec 2005 by Kate
Holmes.
• Additional content created by Connect Your
Community, a project of OneCommunity,
funded by the federal Broadband Technology
Opportunities Program.
Creative Commons License
• This work is licensed under the Creative
Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
To view a copy of this license, visit
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0