Thursday, February 26, 2015

Navigating the Net and using its tools

Search Engines

Learning how to use the Internet to find specific 

information and/or items will require the use of 

search engines (Google, Yahoo, Bing, and etc.) and 

using several strategies to use search engines. One 

method is searching by subject index would provide 

you a list of links that is relevant to the subject 

index that you have searched on. The other method 

is searching by keywords. Keyword searches can use 

single or a combination of words that could lead you 

to a list of URLs of the sites or information/items you 

are searching for. Learning those two methods of 

using search engines would help you fare better in 

using the Internet as a powerful tool (Roblyer & 

Doering, p. 219).

Website Evaluation Video



The website evaluation video above was made for 

middle school students but it is relevant information 

that helps us to assess websites by its authority, 

objectivity, currency, accuracy and usefulness.  The 

websites are within the Internet, the websites should 

not just represent the content to the learner, online 

content must purposefully and strategically engage 

the learner (Roblyer & Doering, p. 226).

Favorite Website #1

My favorite website #1 is Alabama School for the 

Deaf’s website at 

http://www.asdsilentwarriors.com/I graduated 

from there and now I work there as a dorm program 

supervisor on weekends. Alabama School for the 

Deaf (ASD) is a residential school serving deaf/hard 

of hearing individuals across Alabama. This website 

is beneficial to us because it shows how website 

content can be useful in keeping the students and 

employees of ASD well informed with what’s for 

lunch, what is being learned in classes now, movie 

showings, dorm life, athletics, INOW data system, 

and many more. When evaluating this website, 

according to p. 255 of Integrating Educational 

Technology Into Teaching this website displays great 

structure and organization that is suited best suited 

to my job needs, and it is a good example for others 

evaluating websites (Roblyer & Doering).

Favorite Wiki Website 

My favorite wiki website is wiki answers at 

http://wiki.answers.com/.  In this wiki online 

community, questions are answered. There is no 

question too dumb, too long, too short, too simple, 

too… Any questions are asked and answered in this 

wiki website. Like for example, I asked, “What color 

is sound?” Wiki Answer answered with “Sound has 

no color”, and then explains what sound is made up. 

This wiki website is a great example of how a online 

community can encourage collaboration and 

communication of ideas by having users contribute 

or modify content, sometimes on a daily basis (

(Roblyer & Doering, p. 223). I would use this wiki in 

the classroom when students want answers without 

the inconvenience of asking them in person they 

could find questions answered at Wiki Answers.


References 

Experts you should follow. (2015). Retrieved February 26, 2015, from http://www.answers.com/

Roblyer, M. D., & Doering, A. H. (2013). Integrating educational technology into teaching. Boston: Allyn and Bacon.

A Tour of Our Beautiful Campus. (2015). Retrieved February 26, 2015, from http://www.asdsilentwarriors.com/

Website Evaluation A How To Guide for Middle School Students. 

          (2012). Retrieved February 26, 2015, from 

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FLZ-ne0csto

2 comments:

  1. Wiki answers looks like a great website that could easily fit into a classroom setting. The structure, organization, and easy navigation make it a functional tool that will allow students to get the most out of using it (Roblyer and Doering, 2013). I could envision doing a homework assignment where students have to ask 5 questions on differing subjects and find an appropriate response. They can also put in a question they were too embarrassed to ask or write in a question when they haven't been able to get in contact with the teacher. Wiki answers is a useful website that I will be sure to implement.

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  2. I like the design of the wiki you posted. I agree with Ehren that its easy navigation make it a functional tool that will allow students to get the most out of using it (Roblyer and Doering, 2013). The strength of the wiki's design is in how austere it is. There isn't really anything there to distract from what you're looking for.

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