- one way to narrow your search focus is to add quotation marks (“”) that way the search engine knows exactly what you’re looking for and what you’re not.
- the second way to. narrow your search results is to actually “delete” a word from showing up using a dash (-) before the word, or news program, etc..
- the third way is to add a (*) instead of the missing word you either forgot or don’t know. google knows then what your looking for and can add the missing words
(2.) I wanted to find the book “the world as I see it” by Albert Einstein. at first I googled “the world as it” because I couldn’t remember the rest of it, then I used the * rule and so many options came up for the world as I see it. (12 130 000 000) vs (15 180 000) options .
(3.) CRAAP (currency, relevance, authority, accuracy, purpose) meaning when did someone last edit it, if it was a while ago it could have been true then but not now. is it meaningful, who is the author? can anyone edit it? as a student I’ve always been told not to trust wikipedia yet they have so much information that sounds accurate, but anyone can edit it. In grade 5 a teacher of mine and a few of the students wanted to test this out so we made an account and put something up on wikipedia. (the sentence is random, most likely false, and just not nessesary) it is still up on the website.
(4.) its a personal learning network. you can read other peoples ideas, thoughts, information and more. or you can share your own information. you can share a pln on twitter, youtube, or any social networking place.
(5.) review current networks, separate/balance, create a “toolbox”, stratify, and personalize are the 5 steps to make a pln. also you need to be an active participant
https://www.powtoon.com/online-presentation/dgmxXgoFY9Z/?mode=movie
Morgan, this should be a a page with an embedded Piktochart. If you require additional assistance to complete your assignment please come to Flex in room 213. 2/5