Empowerment Technology Week 2
Empowerment Technology Week 2
Empowerment Technology Week 2
TECHNOLOGY
CHALLENGE QUESTION:
Are you a smarter user of search engines?
Do you always rely on the first search results online?
Have you “Googled”( Search online using Google.com) yourself lately?
Are you happy with the results?
How do you find answers to questions from the simple to the complex?
Google might naturally come to mind. Did you know that you could also
use Wolfram as an alternative search engine?
Research Skills
“Research” sometimes just means finding out information about
a topic. You can certainly develop advanced information retrieval
skills in Working with Sources. However, in specific understandings of
“research” carry a lot of weight. The classic definition is that
“research” leads to an original contribution to knowledge in a
particular field of inquiry by defining an important question or
problem and then answering or solving it in a systematic way.
So you will need to read on to develop a relevant understanding
of what research means in your subject.
Copyright issues
Everyone has a somewhat flexible, but not unlimited, copyright
privilege under the "fair use clause" of the U.S. Copyright Act. "Fair
use" is the means by which educators of non-profit educational
institutions may use copyrighted works without seeking permission
or making payment to the author or publisher. Teachers and students
are also protected to some extent by the Digital Millennium Copyright
Act, which went into effect in October 1998. Under current guidelines,
teachers and students are able to make limited use of copyrighted
materials for instructional purposes.
Currently, copyright law as it relates to the Internet is vague and
being challenged and rewritten on an ongoing basis. However, the
guidelines of the "fair use clause" can be applied to Internet use in the
classroom. Although classroom use allows teachers and students to be
creative, you must also be extremely careful. Teachers and students
should realize that all materials found on the Internet are protected by
the same copyright laws as printed materials. Copyright protects
"original works of authorship" that are in a tangible form of
expression.
Copyrightable works include the following categories:
literary works
musical works, including any accompanying words
dramatic works, including any accompanying music,
pantomimes, and choreographic works
pictorial, graphic, and sculptural works
motion pictures and other audiovisual works
sound recordings
architectural works
These categories should be viewed broadly. For example, computer
programs and most "compilations" may be registered as "literary
works"; maps and architectural plans may be registered as "pictorial,
graphic, and sculptural works."
Important questions to ask
What is the purpose for using the material?
Who is the audience?
How widely will the material be distributed?
Will the material be reproduced?
It is allowable under copyright guidelines to use copyrighted
materials for class assignments. Check specific guidelines for length of
time the material can be kept up on a web site
ACTIVITY 1
What Matters in a Query?
Using the major search engines on the Web, find the best way to look
for a needle. Fill out the following chart, noting the number of hits you
receive in each of the search engines for the word needle and the
phrase "Space Needle." Then, answer the questions at the bottom of
the page.
Example : search for friend in google
ACROSS
1. Who is the author of Waiting for Godot?
3. What is the last digit in the ISBN number for Ann E. Barron's 1997
book?
4. Who wrote The Mysterious Cat?
6. Who wrote a pantomime about Jack and the Beanstalk?
7. What is the first word in the title of one of Michael Verney's books?
9. What is the last digit in the LC Call Number for 101 Dalmatians by
Justine Korman?
10. Who wrote Anatomy of the Honey Bee?
12. When Ten Great Basketball Offenses was revised,how many
offenses were there?
13. Who wrote the Global Mind?
14. What is the title of a book by Leon Uris?
DOWN
1. Who wrote How Good Guys Grow Rich?
2. How many books did Judy Blume publish in 1972?
3. What does the F. stand for in F. Scott Fitzgerald?
5. Who illustrated The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, published by
Heritage Press in 1940?
8. Where was the Equestrian Statue of Peter I published?
11. How many years did the author of The Scarlet Letter live?
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