sticking with good websites

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Sticking with Good Websites. What LMS 6th Grade Students Should Know by: Mrs. Norland. Which website is sticky?. Which website is icky?. Be Picky !. www.photoshop.com. Your Social Studies teacher wants you to learn about Egypt. You choose to research mummies. Where would you start?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Sticking with Good Websites

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 2: Sticking with Good Websites

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

www.photoshop.com

Page 3: Sticking with Good Websites

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.Your Social Studies teacher wants you to learn

about Egypt.

You choose to research mummies. Where would you

start?

http://www.richard-seaman.com/Wallpaper/Travel/MiddleEast/GizaPyramids1.jpg

Page 4: Sticking with Good Websites

The best place to find information would be on

reliable websites that you can

trust.

Page 5: Sticking with Good Websites

Typically, LMS students are asked to access information for research through Kan-ED:

http://login.learningstation.com/kportal/

Many teachers would expect you to use pre-selected links to websites on their Moodle pages to begin your research.

Page 6: Sticking with Good Websites

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.What if you just did a Google search on “mummies” in

Safari or Firefox?

http://www.richard-seaman.com/Wallpaper/Travel/MiddleEast/GizaPyramids1.jpg

Page 7: Sticking with Good Websites

How would you know if the

information was true?

How much time would it take for you to

discover if the website was useful or not?

Page 8: Sticking with Good Websites

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Here’s two things to think about when looking for websites you can

trust:

img.dailymail.co.uk/tutDM2910_468x730.jpg

Page 9: Sticking with Good Websites

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are needed to see this picture.

• Can you find the author’s name?

• Is there an e-mail address that you can contact the author?

• Can you find a clearly stated purpose for this website?

• Look at the URL to see if it is connected with any organization. If it is a personal website, look for

a ˜ , % , or people/members/users

• Is this author a reliable expert?

Page 10: Sticking with Good Websites

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are needed to see this picture.

•Is this website up to date? (Near the top or bottom of

homepage.)

•Are the links easy to use, and connect to something useful?

•Are there links that connect back to the home page?

•Is there a lot of unnecessary images, graphics, or advertisements?

•Does the information appear to be factual (not full of opinions), useful, and

accurate?

•What about good grammar and spelling?

Page 11: Sticking with Good Websites

Now, we will have a look at some “mummies”

websites from random Google searches.

Let’s see what we can discover about AUTHORITY

and CONTENT.

Page 12: Sticking with Good Websites

•Which URL shows a personal website

(which may not be expert information?)

How can you tell?

•Which URL is connected to a

Commercial site?

•Which might be an Educational site?

•Do the descriptions help explain a

purpose for the site?

•How might you narrow down your search by the topic

you enter in the subject box?

% = personal

Page 13: Sticking with Good Websites

•Which URL is associated with an

Organization?

•Which might be an Educational site?

•Which URL is connected to a

Commercial site?

•Do the descriptions help explain a

purpose for the site?

•Which sites do you think would provide

more factual information? Why?

Page 14: Sticking with Good Websites

• Can you find the author’s name?

• Is there an e-mail address that you can contact the

author?

• Can you find a clearly stated

purpose for this website?

• When was the website last

updated? (An updated

website is generally a good sign.)

Is the author an expert?

Page 15: Sticking with Good Websites

“Andrew Bayuk has a passion for ancient Egypt. Currently, he is working on his second album which contains songs about various aspects of ancient Egypt. He created and maintains one of the original, largest and most comprehensive ancient Egypt websites called Guardian's Egypt ( http://guardians.net ) and hosts Dr. Zawi Hawass’s websites. It was recently updated in June 2008. Here you can explore the pyramids, tombs, temples of Egypt, breaking news, mummies, hieroglyphs, exhibits and much more.”

Dr. Zawi Hawass is a true expert and scientist in the preservation of ancient Egyptian artifacts and historical sites.

To find out if the website’s author is an expert, who gives accurate and useful information, you could Google

his name, or go to www.alexa.com to find out more about the reliability of any website.

Page 16: Sticking with Good Websites

• This .com site is trying to sell you

something.

•Can you find the author’s name or contact e-mail?

• Is the purpose for this website as

clearly stated as the previous

page’s website?

Look what happened when I clicked on the links at the bottom…

Page 17: Sticking with Good Websites

•Are the links connecting to

something useful?

•Are there unnecessary

images, graphics, or advertisements?

•What about good grammar and

spelling?

(Did you see the spelling error?)

What do you think of the

quality of this site, just by these two

snapshots?

Page 18: Sticking with Good Websites

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.6. Website is up to date.

7. Links work and connect to useful information and back to home page.

8. Images and graphics are appropriate to website.

9. Factual, useful and accurate information.

10. Good grammar and spelling.

1. Author’s name provided.

2. E-mail or author contact.

3. Clearly stated purpose.

4. Information from URL.

5. Author is reliable or an expert.

Page 19: Sticking with Good Websites

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.6. Website is up to date.

7. Links work and connect to useful information and back to home page.

8. Images and graphics are appropriate to website.

9. Factual, useful and accurate information.

10. Good grammar and spelling.

1. Author’s name provided.

2. E-mail or author contact.

3. Clearly stated purpose.

4. Information from URL.

5. Author is reliable or an expert.

YOUR TURN: Go to one of the Social Studies sites on Mrs. Norland’s “Moodle” page.

Which of them is better quality, and more reliable, and shows more of the “top ten?”

Page 20: Sticking with Good Websites

Some other reliable K-12 Websites you may try:

http://www.kn.pacbell.com/wired/bluewebn/

More information on evaluating websites can be found on Kathy Schrock’s page:

http://school.discoveryeducation.com/schrockguide/eval.html

THIS POWERPOINT’S INFORMATION ALSO BASED ON:

MULTNOMAH COUNTY LIBRARY “Evaluating Websites”

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MAINE “Checklist for Web Resources”