Description Can you imagine a world without Google?  Our students just can’t even. For those of us who remember the days when you actually had to go to a library to do research, or remember how to use a card catalog or an ERIC search, we think kids these days have it so easy.  But […]

Description

Can you imagine a world without Google?  Our students just can’t even. For those of us who remember the days when you actually had to go to a library to do research, or remember how to use a card catalog or an ERIC search, we think kids these days have it so easy.  But is it? Is Google the savior it is purported to be? Or has it just made us lazy?


Lessons Learned

Dennis – Google “Wizard of Oz” Click the shoes then click the tornado


Chris – Google “Thanos,” click on the cartoon glove, and watch what happens.


Daniel – ctrl+two finger scroll – (Mac) You can zoom closer on your screen wherever you put the mouse.


 


Fun Fact

(From our Corrections & Retractions department)


Our fun fact from last week was not accurate.  The 7% we quoted from John Borg, is a misinterpretation  of the “7-38-55 rule” postulated by Albert Mehrabian


https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/misinterpretation-7-38-55-rule-pedja-jovanovic/


It is more accurate to say the 60-70% is body language, and that “What we say is less important than how we say it.”


 


Notes & Links

Digital natives are not better at sniffing out fake news!


 


The information for how to spot misleading websites is often from a document created in 1998


 


Adults (56% in a trial study) could not tell fake news from real news


 


Esteemed Historians failed to sniff out a highly biased site from a mainstream site.


 


Learn & Teach, do not filter


 


WHOIS IP Lookup (for free!)


https://www.ultratools.com/tools/ipWhoisLookup


 


Positive Learning in the Age of Information


https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9783658195663


 


Why Google Can’t Save Us


https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-658-19567-0_13


 


Sam Wineburg


https://ed.stanford.edu/faculty/wineburg