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Finding and Evaluating
Internet Information
There are numerous online tutorials
available for searching the Internet; a few of the more thorough
ones are listed here. To begin, decide which of the
following best describes your skills or needs, and click on that
line.
- I
have little or no experience searching the Internet.
- I
know the basics of surfing the web, but I would like to learn
how to find reliable information.
Basics
of Internet Searching -- and more
Despite the wealth of information
available on the Internet, finding exactly what you need can be
frustrating. However, with patience, time, and good
instructions, if the information is there, you can find it.
There are many sites on the World Wide Web to help you get
started.
The State
University of New York (SUNY) at Albany has a useful site
with a glossary of terms that you will encounter frequently on the
Internet as well as a short tutorial.
The Ohio State University Library's
net.Tutor
has information for beginners as well as more skilled searchers.
The emphasis is on using the Internet for scholarly research.
Search
Engine Watch, a site devoted to listings and critiques of
the hundreds of search engines currently available, offers an
excellent resource of slightly more advanced web
searching tips.
Evaluating
Internet Resources
Now that you know how to find
information on the Internet, how do you know whether it is useful
for your purposes. You probably need scholarly information.
How do you evaluate resources in an environment in which just
about anyone can, and has, built an Internet site? Help is
available at the following sites:
Widener
University has one of the best tutorials on the Internet
on how to analyze information found on the World Wide Web.
It is part of their amazingly thorough, but simple, WWW tutorial.
University
of California at Berkeley was one of the earliest
universities to make extensive use of the Internet and continues
to be one of the frontrunners in online education. This is
their site for finding scholarly information.
SUNY
at Albany offers this easy to follow tutorial for
evaluation of web sources.
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