Saturday, March 30, 2019

Teaching Students about Online Reference Resources


     Researching a topic can be a challenge. For those with little guidance, Google is a popular go-to for information. Unfortunately, there are some issues with using Google, such as: a) it only indexes around 4% of internet content (Cuthrell), b) the quality of retrieved information isn't consistently good or reliable, c) there's barely any qualifiers to place on inquiries, and d) it retrieves links based on “PageRank”, which includes frequency of requested keyword, age of the page (the older the better), and how many sites link to it (Strickland) rather than the more useful methodology of retrieving queries based on "titles, subject headings, class numbers, and qualification metadata to ensure the precision of ranked output" (Markey, 8); therefore, Google isn’t the best resource to use for research. No resource is, actually, the be-all-end-all for all forms of inquiries, which highlights the importance and need of reference resource professionals to help students with their inquiries. Professionals such as teacher-librarians.
     One place these professionals could start when teaching about these resources (to aid students in their research/inquiries) is telling them about the scope of the internet itself and informing them of the three terms used to explain this scope: surface web, deep web, and dark web.
https://darkwebnews.com/deep-web/
     The surface web is all the indexed, and the search-engine-accessible, content that don’t require logins to view (Google, Amazon, Landmark Cinemas, Imdb, Wikipedia, etc.). The deep web is the opposite: unindexed, unsearchable, and content that includes sites which require logging in to view (emails, World Book, EBSCO). Many surface web pages started out as deep web pages before their “rank” pushed them to the “surface”. The dark web is a sub-section of the deep web that can only be accessed with a specific browser and is used by those who don’t want their messages or internet activities observed; it’s a part of the web that only the most experienced of internet users should visit as illegal and, quite frankly, terrifying/disturbing things can go on there (or be rumored to) (Cuthrell). The important take-away is that a lot of useful inquiries and research information can be found on the safe part of the deep web – information those who only look at the surface web would never see. It’s also important to note that when most people do browse the surface web with search-engines they typically stop after the first page or two, which means they barely see much of surface web content as well!
     What a teacher-librarian should be able to do is to help students find the wealth of great resources found on the deep web and nearly un-accessed part of the surface web. In my previous blog post, I wrote about a reference resource website I created (IDCC Online Library) for students, parents, teachers, and teacher-librarians to gain access to such great, often hidden, resources, but certain schools and school districts also have sections on their pages that link to useful resources and some to locked resources that they’ve paid for (World Book, EBSCO, Gale). Teacher-librarians should find out what great resources their school or school district has paid for, familiarize themselves with the content, and show/teach students and teachers how to use them, including how to login to them.
     The other important piece to teach is which type of resource (online and print) one should use for their specific inquiry, including the benefits, purposes, and drawbacks of each resource. Such types include: yearbooks (Guinness), atlases, biographies, bibliographies, almanacs, handbooks, directories, dictionaries, thesauruses, encyclopedias, maps, gazetters, indexes, periodicals, and sites with limited, specific, scope (NASA, Three Sixty Cameras). Teacher-librarians should also be able to evaluate which of these resources are good, based on such qualifiers as: accuracy, authority, cost, currency, ease of use, comprehensiveness, content, format, indexing, objectivity, scope, scale, and vendor (Riedling).
     And, finally, there’s research methods which should be taught based on grade level, such as Points of Inquiry for upper elementary, Super 3 for middle school, and Big 6 for Secondary School, or methods like these as there are many kinds and the topic can also influence which one should be used/taught.
References
Cuthrell, Shannon. “Deep Web.” Dark Web News, https://darkwebnews.com/deep-web/.
Markey, K. (2007). The online library catalog: Paradise lost and paradise regained? D-Lib Magazine, 13(1), 8.
Riedling, Ann Marlow, et al. Reference Skills for the School Librarian Tools and Tips. Linworth, 2013.
Savoie, JP. "About." IDCC Online Libraryhttps://idcconlinelibrary.wixsite.com/idcc.
Strickland, Jonathan. "How Google Works." How Stuff Workshttps://computer.howstuffworks.com/internet/basics/google1.htm.

“The Points of Inquiry.” British Columbia Teacher-Librarians’ Association, https://bctla.ca/resources/point-of-inquiry/.

“TheBig6.Org.” TheBig6, thebig6.org/.

2 comments:

  1. Hi! I like your summary of the Surface, Deep and Dark Web. And thanks for mentioning your online library! I am looking forward to diving into this for the future. I have seen libraries with lists of trusted resources before and think it's necessary to have a few extra sources at the ready for students.

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  2. Jean-Paul - what a wonderful image you provided. I specifically appreciated you listing some of the approaches toward inquiry!

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