View - ICT Teaching Resources

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Transcript View - ICT Teaching Resources

Web Browser
A software application that enables you
to view and interact with pages on the
World Wide Web.
Examples include Internet Explorer,
Firefox, Chrome, Safari
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Search Engine
A database on the World Wide Web that
enables you to use search terms or key
words to find relevant pages or websites.
Examples include Google, Alta Vista, Ask
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URL
Stands for Uniform Resource Locator.
A URL is the unique web address for
every page on the internet.
Examples:
•www.teach-ict.com
•www.amazon.com
•www.facebook.com
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Keywords
Keywords are the terms in a webpage
that would be used to match the search
term a user enters into a search engine.
If you search for ‘ICT’ then the search
engine will find you every page on the
web that has ‘ICT’ in the body text, the
header and the tags.
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Search engine results
On your ‘search engine results’ page, find and label the following
items:
1. The search term used
2. The number of results found
3. How long the search took to return your results
4. The title of the one of the search results
5. The URL (web address) for a search result
6. The snippet of text which gives you a quick overview of the
content of the page
7. Links to similar pages
8. The search engines most recent stored version of the page
9. Related searches that you could try
10. More pages of your results
11. Paid for advertisements
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Searching for Information
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Understanding URLs
During this unit, you will be finding out about some of
the following things:
•What a URL means
•How to search for information effectively on the
Internet
•How to make sure that the information you find is
accurate
•How to choose appropriate information to help you
develop a presentation about a given topic.
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The Internet
In 2007, it was estimated that there were more
than 108 million websites on the Internet *.
Each of these websites contain a number of
pages, some just a few, some perhaps
hundreds.
And every single day, hundreds of thousands
of new web pages are added to the Internet.
* Netcraft web server survey
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Uniform Resource Locators
For you to stand any chance of finding what
you want on the Internet, there has to be an
easy way to locate a particular web page.
Luckily every single one of those billions of
web pages has its own unique address – a bit
like you have your own unique address at
home.
These web page addresses have a name –
they are called ‘Uniform Resource Locators or
URL for short.
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Uniform Resource Locators (URLs)
These are some examples of the URLs that
you may have come across:
http://www.google.com
http://www.yahoo.co.uk
http://www.amazon.com
If you type these URLs into your browser, you will go
to the exact site you wanted without having to use a
search engine.
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Uniform Resource Locators (URLs)
A URL can often tell you a lot about a website before
you even visit it.
http://www.amazon.co.uk
http means the protocol used
Protocol is the way that two computers have agreed to
‘talk’ to each other. There are many different protocols
available.
For web pages, the method used is called HyperText
Transfer Protocol or HTTP.
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Uniform Resource Locators (URLs)
http://www.amazon.co.uk
The www is short for World Wide Web.
The www in the URL does not really do anything, it
simply grew out of popular use. You will now find
many websites which do not have ‘www’ in their
URL.
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Uniform Resource Locators (URLs)
http://www.amazon.co.uk
Amazon.co.uk is called the Domain name.
It is part of the URL.
However, it also tells you which organisation
owns the site.
In this case, a company called Amazon.
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Uniform Resource Locators (URLs)
http://www.amazon.co.uk
Notice that part of the URL contains the word
.co
This can tell you a lot about the type of website
that you will be visiting. In this instance, it
means that the website belongs to a company or
business.
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Uniform Resource Locators (URLs)
Other URL endings that you may come across:
.gov
Government site
.com
International company
.co
Company
.org
Organisation (often a charity)
.ac
Academic – often a university
.sch
School
.ed
Education
.net
Network of websites
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Uniform Resource Locators (URLs)
http://www.amazon.co.uk
Finally, notice that this URL ends with ‘.uk’
This means that the website is registered in the
United Kingdom.
A website which ended with:
.fr would mean it was registered in France
.cn would be registered in China
.nz would be registered in New Zealand
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