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Autore principale: Minkel, Walter
Natura: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: 2004
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ705678
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author Minkel, Walter
author_facet Minkel, Walter
Minkel, Walter
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents They Can't Always Find What They Want; Kids' Online Behaviors Have Researchers Scratching Their Heads Minkel, Walter Youth Use Studies Search Engines Internet Online Searching Information Literacy Search Strategies Student Attitudes Librarians School Libraries Understanding precisely how young people search for online information is both easy and frustrating. It's a snap because we can easily observe kids sitting down at a computer, going straight to Google, typing in one or two key words, and selecting a few Web pages from a huge list of hits. It's frustrating because of the many questions their searches raise in our minds. Why, for instance, do most students see one search engine as the answer to all of their information needs? How do children choose their search terms? What will it take for kids to develop more efficient information-hunting skills? A new book called Youth Information-Seeking Behavior: Theories, Models, and Issues (Scarecrow, 2004) offers some intriguing insights. Edited by Mary K. Chelton and Colleen Cool of Queens College in Flushing, NY, the collection of 13 research studies examines how young people (elementary-school students through high schoolers) find--or fail to find--relevant information.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ705678
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2004
record_format eric
spellingShingle They Can't Always Find What They Want; Kids' Online Behaviors Have Researchers Scratching Their Heads
Minkel, Walter
Youth
Use Studies
Search Engines
Internet
Online Searching
Information Literacy
Search Strategies
Student Attitudes
Librarians
School Libraries
They Can't Always Find What They Want; Kids' Online Behaviors Have Researchers Scratching Their Heads Minkel, Walter Youth Use Studies Search Engines Internet Online Searching Information Literacy Search Strategies Student Attitudes Librarians School Libraries Understanding precisely how young people search for online information is both easy and frustrating. It's a snap because we can easily observe kids sitting down at a computer, going straight to Google, typing in one or two key words, and selecting a few Web pages from a huge list of hits. It's frustrating because of the many questions their searches raise in our minds. Why, for instance, do most students see one search engine as the answer to all of their information needs? How do children choose their search terms? What will it take for kids to develop more efficient information-hunting skills? A new book called Youth Information-Seeking Behavior: Theories, Models, and Issues (Scarecrow, 2004) offers some intriguing insights. Edited by Mary K. Chelton and Colleen Cool of Queens College in Flushing, NY, the collection of 13 research studies examines how young people (elementary-school students through high schoolers) find--or fail to find--relevant information.
title They Can't Always Find What They Want; Kids' Online Behaviors Have Researchers Scratching Their Heads
topic Youth
Use Studies
Search Engines
Internet
Online Searching
Information Literacy
Search Strategies
Student Attitudes
Librarians
School Libraries
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ705678