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| http://www.thedigitalshift.com/
Pose a research question
to students and most of them will immediately turn to the Internet. Sadly, many
students think the only option is Google. Some of our students who have spent a
lot of time in the library may try a database like CQ Researcher or ABC-CLIO,
but those services require a login to use them. And that can be an obstacle to
adoption by students. Here I’ll present some free options for research that
don’t require a login, along with a few quick tips to aid student searches.
Every year, several kids
will spend 10 minutes on a Web search and say, “Google has nothing on this.” My
first response to them is “did you open the links or just read the snippet in
the search results page?” If the answer’s no, I send them back to access the
links and search within those pages. To help them determine if a page contains
what they’re looking for, I teach my students to use “command + F” on a Mac
keyboard and “control + F” on Windows. Those shortcuts enable students to
search within the contents of a page for a key term or phrase.
Ref Seek (refseek.com) is a search engine whose
intention is to only serve links that have potential academic use. Ref Seek
seems to eliminate the advertising and paid links found on Google, Ask, Yahoo,
and other commercial search tools. To discern the advantage of Ref Seek over a
generic Google search, you need to look below the top returns. As you compare
search results between the two, you’ll find that the second and third pages of
results on Ref Seek will contain more academic resources than you’d typically
find in a generic Google search. Students can then sort Ref Seek results into
“links only” or “documents only” views.
Yolink (yolink.com) quietly powers the search boxes
found on many websites today. Yolink’s technology is included in Sweet Search (sweetsearch.com), a popular tool among
teachers, which was profiled in January 2012. But Yolink can also be used as a
browser add-on (www.yolinkeducation.com/education) for Chrome
and Safari. Yolink for Chrome and Safari allows students to search within the
contents of a webpage, highlight important parts of a page, and send those
highlights directly to a Google Doc.
K–12 students tend to
undertake common searches. So our students don’t need to reinvent the wheel
with every research task. Direct them to publicly shared bookmarking services
such as Diigo (diigo.com) and Delicious (delicious.com) to discover what others have
found on the same topic. After they’ve grabbed a few links from those public
bookmarks, ask your students to contribute some bookmarks of their own.
Finally,
there’s Google Scholar (scholar.google.com),
which indexes published research. Students looking here, however, shouldn’t
expect quick answers to their questions. Perusing Google Scholar is a lot like looking
in the bibliography of a good book to identify the best sources on a topic.
Google Scholar can lead students to a variety of resources, including
abstracts, papers, books, patent records, and court opinions.
The tool lists how many
times a particular item has been cited in scholarly works and allows you to
click through to see the titles of those works. Some of these items may be
available for viewing online, in Google Books, for example. However, certain
results in Google Scholar will link to papers and journals contained in
subscription-required databases. Those cases are a perfect opportunity to
introduce students to the databases available in your school or library and
demonstrate that Google is not the be-all and end-all when it comes to research.
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