Try some of the Internet Search Engines below:
WHY? Rationale for Evaluating What You Find on the Web
The World Wide Web can be a great place to accomplish research on many topics. But putting documents or pages on the web is easy, cheap or free, unregulated, and unmonitored.
• Documents can easily be copied and falsified or copied with omissions and errors -- intentional or accidental.
• In the general World Wide Web there are no editors (unlike most print publications) to proofread and "send it back" or "reject it" until it meets the standards of a publishing house's reputation.
• Most pages found in general search engines for the web are self-published or published by businesses small and large with motives to get you to buy something or believe a point of view.
• Even within university and library web sites, there can be many pages that the institution does not try to oversee.
The web needs to be free like that! And you, if you want to use it for serious research, need to cultivate the habit of healthy skepticism, of questioning everything you find with critical thinking.Therein lies the rationale for evaluating carefully whatever you find on the Web.
The burden is on you - the reader - to establish the validity, authorship, timeliness, and integrity of what you find.
Surfing the Web
The Internet can be a valuable source for supplementing the information you have gathered from books and periodicals.
However, it is VERY IMPORTANT that you EVALUATE THE INFORMATION you get from the Internet to determine if it is reliable and useful to your research.
Here are a few Internet sites to get you started with your assignment:
Below are resources that can help you understand the immigration and migration experience from a historical perspective, focusing on the lives of migrant farm workers in California.
Countless web pages are available on just about every topic, but how can you know what's worthwhile or credible?Evaluation of web pages and websites has become a necessary part of the research process, and a means to sharpen your own critical thinking skills. Some of the fundamental questions to consider during evaluation are:
AUTHORSHIP Note that "author" can mean a person or organization. |
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ACCURACY
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CURRENCYLook at both the date of publication and update, as well as the dates for any cited information. |
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CONTENTDoes the information on the website meet your research or information needs? |
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PURPOSEThe purpose of the site should be clear. Be aware that some sites present opinion as fact in order to sell or persuade. |
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DESIGNVisual layout, choice of images and media files often have an impact on a website's professional credibility. |
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