Googling Smarter. Tip #1: Use the keywords that credible research sources would use… stress and...

12
Googling Smarter

Transcript of Googling Smarter. Tip #1: Use the keywords that credible research sources would use… stress and...

Page 1: Googling Smarter. Tip #1: Use the keywords that credible research sources would use… stress and teens vs. stress and adolescents.

Googling Smarter

Page 2: Googling Smarter. Tip #1: Use the keywords that credible research sources would use… stress and teens vs. stress and adolescents.

Tip #1: Use the keywords that credible research sources would use…

stress and teensvs.

stress and adolescents

Page 3: Googling Smarter. Tip #1: Use the keywords that credible research sources would use… stress and teens vs. stress and adolescents.

Stress and teens

• More self-help pages and pages for parents

• More organizations and periodicals designed to help people but not to do research (familydoctor.org, USA Today)

Page 4: Googling Smarter. Tip #1: Use the keywords that credible research sources would use… stress and teens vs. stress and adolescents.

Stress and adolescents• More research

studies and fewer help pages

• More universities, government agencies like the NIH, and professional organizations (National Assn. of School Psychologists)

Page 5: Googling Smarter. Tip #1: Use the keywords that credible research sources would use… stress and teens vs. stress and adolescents.

Tip #2: Use all the different sections of Google, for example News

Page 6: Googling Smarter. Tip #1: Use the keywords that credible research sources would use… stress and teens vs. stress and adolescents.
Page 7: Googling Smarter. Tip #1: Use the keywords that credible research sources would use… stress and teens vs. stress and adolescents.

Tip #3: Use Google Advanced Searchwww.google.com/advanced_search

Page 8: Googling Smarter. Tip #1: Use the keywords that credible research sources would use… stress and teens vs. stress and adolescents.

The first box, “all these words,” is an AND search. It looks for websites where all those words occur frequently. That’s your normal

Google search

You don’t have to put “and” between your search terms.

Page 9: Googling Smarter. Tip #1: Use the keywords that credible research sources would use… stress and teens vs. stress and adolescents.

The 2nd box, “this exact word or phrase,” looks for only those exact words in that exact order,

so be careful that you’ve got it right! Good for quotations or terms that you’re sure about and you

want to keep the words together (ex: “generalized anxiety disorder”)

Page 10: Googling Smarter. Tip #1: Use the keywords that credible research sources would use… stress and teens vs. stress and adolescents.

The 3rd box, “any of these words,” is an OR search. It looks for pages with this word, OR that word. It’s a broad search and best

with synonyms…

Page 11: Googling Smarter. Tip #1: Use the keywords that credible research sources would use… stress and teens vs. stress and adolescents.

The Site Operator:

Limits Google to searching within one

specific website or

domain (.gov, .edu, .o

rg, etc.)

Page 12: Googling Smarter. Tip #1: Use the keywords that credible research sources would use… stress and teens vs. stress and adolescents.