Internet
Research Skills & Understanding
How to use
this guide
Generally skills get more complex as you move to the bottom of the
document although the order I have used is subjective.
Choose a topic to research that relates to your current curriculum. Using these
skills in a real context creates a much more interesting richer experience.
I would expect Year 3 to go as far as using the synonym search. I
would expect Year 6 children to have covered everything by the time they leave
the school.
Some skills and Understanding are good to combine in a lesson. For example I
might combine bookmarking, multiple word searches and understanding the order
of the results in Year 3.
If you are teaching this in Year 4, 5 & 6 at Abbotswood there is a Google Survey in templates that you
can use as a pre-test to help you target gaps in pupils’ knowledge.
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Skill
or Understanding |
Skill
or Understanding Expanded |
Examples
& Resource Links |
Possible Activities |
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One word searches on a child
friendly search engine |
Introducing child friendly search
engines |
Yahoo
for Kids Kids
Click Ask Kids These are all linked
to on the web links
page at Abbotswood |
Comparing the same search on all three search engines.
Which one produces the best links? |
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Bookmarking a web page by creating a
favourite |
Bookmarking a web page so it can be
easily viewed at a later date |
In Internet Explorer 8 Left click
favourites, Add to favourites, Rename the favourite and click add. |
Can your pupils’ search and bookmark
useful pages for your topic? Can they create their own folders in
favourites and add the bookmarks into this folder? |
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Using the word kids in a search |
Using the words kids in a web search
to return more child friendly results |
Roman
Baths for kids will yield a much more useful set of
websites for KS2 pupils |
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Understanding the order of results
returned |
Top results on a Google search are
web pages that have been linked to by other web pages the most. (slightly
simplistic explanation) |
It’s informative to ask pupils what
they think the top results are before telling them. |
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Multiple word searches on a standard
search engine |
First word is treated as more
important, then the second, then the third etc. |
Google
Bing For example India, village life and
children in a different order will yield very different results. If the words
are closely related to each other such as Roman Baths the order will make
less difference. |
Choose just one search engine.
Google is the biggest. Pre-test some word strings from your topic. Try them
in different orders. Can the class test different strings of words. Do your
results change? |
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Opening multiple web pages without
leaving the search |
Right click on a result link and
left click on open in a new tab in the menu that opens |
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Copying text from an internet page
to an office document |
Highlighting text on a web page,
right click and copy it and then paste it into Word, Publisher or Powerpoint. It is fine to do this for personal use but re
publishing text without permission is not acceptable. Some browsers won’t allow you to do
this so you have to highlight text and then hold Ctrl on the keyboard whilst
pressing C. You can paste by clicking on your document then holding Ctrl and
pressing x on your keyboard. |
Please
note children will often copy text that they don’t understand. Can they
explain it in their own words? |
Good to combine this with naming
your sources so pupils get used to recording where they get things from. |
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Getting typed text read to you |
Some passages of text are too hard for children to read but they might be understood if they were read out loud. |
On a computer navigate to IM Translator text to speech service. If using an IPod use Speak It. The IM Translator link may be found on the Abbotswood School web links page. |
Have some prepared links that you know contain good information. Show your less confident readers how to use the text to speech reader and pause it. They could make notes on the passage. |
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Copying images from an internet page |
Right clicking on the image and
selecting save image as. It is fine to do this for personal use but re
publishing an image without permission is not acceptable |
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Google synonym search |
Using a tilde (~) before a search to
return synonym results |
~large
lakes will find results for great lakes as well |
You could use this as a way of
reinforcing or teaching about synonyms |
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Google dictionary definition |
Dictionary definitions (Define)
before the word |
The basic Google definition will
point to other online dictionaries under the definition |
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Google fill in the blanks |
Using an (*) to get Google to fill
in the blank |
*
city in the world returns the largest, hottest, most
expensive etc. Can be used before, after or in the middle of a phrase |
Great for researching around a topic
combined with – (minus) can be a very useful refinement |
|
Google using a – (minus) to exclude
words |
Including and excluding search words |
Southampton
–football would remove all references to Southampton Football club |
Worth combining with * (wildcard) for refining searches |
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Google search words of equal value
using OR |
Using OR between words to give each word
equal value |
You can do this using Google advanced search. Left click on the options gear wheel
in the top right hand corner of the Google search page. |
Try comparing word strings with word
strings with OR between them. Can older children work out what is happening
when you add OR? |
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Using a subject directory search |
Subject directories allow you to
drill down and narrow your search stage by stage. Good for when you are not
sure what you are looking for. Web searches were all directories once. |
Yahoo
Directory is the best large scale directory to use. Note that you can
change the popularity order to alphabetical order. Kids Click is a more limited version of
this. In
a directory there are always branches that would take you into sexuality. I
think it is worth drawing attention to this and discussing it before using
the directory. |
Use Yahoo Directory to drill through
and find sites relevant to your topic. Can your pupils do the same? What
advantages are there in using this method of searching? You could directly
compare this method with word searches side by side. Who can retrieve information
first? Are there any advantages to using a directory? (lots of word options
you may not have considered) |
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Knowing that some results are
sponsored |
Understanding that sponsored results
are paid for and not necessarily the most linked to or useful |
Try searching for simple things.
Look at the sponsored results. Do they match your search? Can you write a
search where the results have no sponsored links? |
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Using the advanced search options in
Google |
Searching in UK only How old the page is |
Other advanced search features Google Advanced Search |
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Naming your sources |
Avoiding quoting things without
saying where it came from including
the web address reference |
Left click once anywhere in the
address bar. Right click and copy. Paste into your own work either within the
work or as a numbered footnote. Some browsers won’t allow you to do this so
you have to highlight text and then hold Ctrl on the keyboard whilst pressing
C. You can paste by clicking on your document then holding Ctrl and pressing
x on your keyboard. |
If web research is part of a bigger
project or outcome then naming sources is important. Worth linking this with
Bias and Authority issues. |
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Finding physical places with Google
Maps and Google Streetview |
Postcodes, Navigation, Different
views map or satellite |
Google Maps Video Help Files Google maps could have its own
dedicated module |
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Collecting joint research in Google
docs or spreadsheet |
Create a Google spread sheet or
Google Doc and share it with your class so that research can be collated in
one place. |
Best to create 3 or 4 Google Docs
and share children between them or create one spread sheet. Use tables to
create areas for the children to insert work in the Docs or give each child a
row in the spreadsheet. Examples
of this in a blog post |
This really suits subjects that
could have a very varied wide outcome such as what forms of pollution are
there or Roman Britain. |
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Bias |
Bias. Why was the site created? Who created
it? Was it someone neutral, or was it someone who wanted to send a specific
message? |
Looking for Terms and Conditions and
about the author information often found at the bottom of the home page in
small type |
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Authority |
Is the writer truly an expert on the
subject? Trustworthy sources are: museums, national libraries, and archives
sites, UK National television news such as the BBC and major, well-known
information sources like Britannica.com, Encarta.com, and Merriam-Webster
Online. |
You could look at this through a fact and
opinion framework. This site
looks at an article about fact and opinion. This method could be adapted for
lot of websites about famous historical characters. If you want to check a basic fact you can
copy it and and paste it a new search. Do other website agree with these fact? If they do it’s
more likely to be true. |
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Terms & conditions of web 2.0
resources |
Age limits Who owns the data Will your email address be passed
on? |
If you were going to sign up for Prezi how would you find this information out? Where
would you look? |
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