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FINDS Video
FOCUS
Focus on the information need
Ø Plan the experiment or project.
Ø Define terms in a way appropriate for the
context.
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What is my assignment or the information
problem to be solved?
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What questions am I raising or addressing?
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What types of information do I need to answer
the questions?
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What keywords and alternate search terms are
pertinent to my questions?
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How will I organize my search plan?
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How many references do I need?
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What format will I use to present the results?
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Investigate
Investigate resources
Ø Be open minded.
Ø Judge the credibility of sources.
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What criteria should I use to evaluate and
select the information
sources?
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What are some possible sources for the type of information
I need?
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What are the best sources? Are certain sources
required?
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What sources will give me diverse points of
view? How will I identify their strengths and weaknesses?
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Where are the sources located?
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Where is the information within the source, and how do I
locate it?
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Is my search plan working, or do I need to revise it?
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Note
Note and evaluate facts and ideas to answer the question
Ø
Identify conclusions, reasons, and assumptions.
Ø
Judge the quality of an argument, including the acceptability
of its reasons, assumptions, and evidence.
Ø
Ask appropriate clarifying questions.
Ø
Try to be well informed.
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What criteria should I use to evaluate the
information I found?
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Have I considered its purpose, question at
issue, supporting information, concepts, assumptions,
inferences, implications, and point of view? (Paul and Elder,
2006)
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Is the information clear, accurate, precise,
relevant, logical significant, fair? Does it have depth and
breadth? (Paul and Elder, 2006).
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How will I determine what information to record?
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How do I make notes effectively?
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How do I comply with copyright issues?
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Have I recorded my source citation information?
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Critical Evaluation Resources |
Things to Consider
When Evaluating Resources |
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Evaluating Internet Resources |
Do you believe
everything you read? How gullible are you? Questions to help
judge a Website’s authority, objectivity, authenticity,
reliability, timeliness, relevance, efficiency. Become an
Internet Detective. |
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Evaluating Quality Checklist |
Can you believe
everything you read on the Web? Click on each checklist item for
an explanation and examples of questionable Web-based
information. |
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10 C's for Evaluating Internet Resources |
Content,
credibility, critical thinking, copyright, citation, continuity,
censorship, connectivity, comparability and context. |
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Evaluating Print Resources |
Did you know you can
learn a lot about a book before you read it? Learn to evaluate a
resource using bibliographic information. |
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Summarizing, Paraphrasing & Quoting |
Good writers use
three strategies—summarizing, paraphrasing and quoting—to blend
source materials in with their own, while making sure their own
voice is heard. Do you how to use each of these? |
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Avoiding Plagiarism |
Keep yourself out of
legal (and teacher) trouble by knowing what plagiarism is and
how to avoid it. |
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SPC Academic Honesty Policy |
Question (and
answers) about copyright and how to respect it. |
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Note taking |
How to take notes
and what to do with them. |
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Note Layouts |
Several different
ways to take notes. One of them is just right for you. |
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SPC Citation Guide |
Specifics of
creating a "works cited" list for your project and links to
Citation Machines |
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Develop
Develop information into knowledge for presentation
Ø Develop and defend a position on an issue
Ø Draw conclusions when warranted, but with caution.
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What I have learned? What is my thesis or answer
to the question?
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How do I organize my notes to support my
argument or thesis?
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Am I analyzing and using the information
effectively?
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Am I making conclusions based on research
evidence? Does my outline logically organize the evidence and
conclusions?
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What assumptions and implications am I making?
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How should I present the information to best
share what I have learned with others?
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Do I need to integrate technology to enrich,
publish, or present my project?
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Score
Score the product and the process
Scoring the Product:
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Have I stated my purpose clearly?
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Have I stated the question at issue clearly and
precisely?
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Have I identified my assumptions and point of
view?
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Have I been fair-minded in evaluating
all points of view?
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Have I made unsupported claims?
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Is the supporting information clear, accurate,
and relevant to the question?
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Have I gathered sufficient information?
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Are my inferences consistent with each other?
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Have I identified assumptions that led to my
inferences?
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Have I considered the consequences of my
conclusions?
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Did I present the information in the best
manner?
Scoring the Process:
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