A Brief Guide. To support theological information literacy by teaching students how to locate...
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Transcript of A Brief Guide. To support theological information literacy by teaching students how to locate...
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Finding and Evaluating
Information Online
A Brief Guide
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To support theological information literacy by
teaching students how to locate information resources appropriate for use in seminary studies using the Internet.
To support theological information literacy by teaching students how to evaluate information resources located and retrieved using the Internet.
Objective
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Information literacy is the set of skills needed
in order to find, retrieve, analyze, and use information.
Today’s focus is upon finding and evaluating information.
We will briefly discuss retrieval. There is a difference between finding and
retrieving information. You can find information and evaluate it before
you retrieve it, saving time and money.
Remember
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The Internet
Web Sites Portals or Gateways Digital libraries Social Media
Blogs, wikis, discussion groups. Electronic Databases
EBSCO, Pro Quest, First Search, Wilson web.
Finding Information
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News grows old. Today’s established facts may be doubted
tomorrow. Information is never truly free. Published/purchased information is usually
superior to free information. Repetition Overload Information cycle
The Nature of Information
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Information Professionals
• Librarians love to help people find information and have created paths to help you find what you are looking for.
Professors• They are experts in a particular subject area and have
spent years reading the literature.
Your Colleagues
Use the Work of Others!
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Seminary Library Websites Library Special Projects Subject Guides – Research Guides – Pathfinders Bibliographies: Example -
http://www.wabashcenter.wabash.edu/resources/article2.aspx?id=10513
Resource pages Tip: Use these words when searching Google –
“Christian education” “subject guide” or“Church History” “pathfinder” or“Missions” “bibliography”
Libraries
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What: Standardized format for library subject
guides and more. Where: www.libguides.com Useful as a guide to information resources in a
specific subject or on a specific topic. Example: Biblical Languages at HBU.
Libguides
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What: The World’s largest network of Library
resources. Where: www.worldcat.org Copy/Paste or Export a Turabian Citation. More features through Firstsearch
WorldCat
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Open Access Journals are academic journals
that have been published and may be accessed for free.
Directory of Open Access Journals: Religion – http://www.doaj.org/doaj?func=subject&cpid=16
The Master’s Seminary list of Free Journals: http://www.tms.edu/LibraryFreeJournals.aspx
Open Access
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The best information is available from
subscription services because information is never truly free.
Seminary libraries have to pay for access to these services so that students can use them. Many institutions provide alumni access.
Electronic Databases require login information that must be provided by your institution for you to access them.
Subscription Services
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EBSCO Databases
ATLA Religion Database Religion and Philosophy
Collection World History ERIC (Education)
Electronic Databases
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Boolean Operators Pearl Growing These are just two things to learn about
searching electronic databases. These are skills used in information retrieval.
Searching Databases
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ANDOR
NOT
Jesus
DeityJohn
BOOLEAN OPERATORS
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Pearl Growing
A strategy for growing a search, bit by bit from one useful citation or search term into a search that yields the best results.
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Scholarly vs. Popular Relevant or Irrelevant Useful for your purposes or not useful Authoritative or lacking authority Spiritual aspect in theological study
Evaluating Information
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Popular vs. Scholarly
Magazines Newspapers Many Websites Christian living
books• Charles Swindoll• Warren Wiersbe• Max Lucado
Books with a credentialed Author• Look for References
Reference Works Websites from reputable
colleges and Universities Peer-Reviewed Scholarly
Journals (Print and Electronic)
Academic Library Websites
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Keys to Choosing Scholarly BooksAuthor
What does he or she do for a living?What credentials does he or she have?How many books on the same subject?Referenced in other books?
Publisher Is it a University Press? Does it usually publish
academic books in this subject area?
Keep a mental list of good publishers.
Does it publish books for credentialed authors?
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Publishers
Baker Book House Wm B. Eeerdmans Banner of Truth Trust Hendrickson Crossway Paternoster Press InterVarsity Press Westminster & John
Knox Press
Zondervan J. Clarke Kregal Thomas Nelson Klock and Klock Moody Press F. H. Revell Word
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Ask yourself questions about the web site: What does the URL tell me? • URL extension? .edu .com .org .net .gov• Truncate the URL. What is the foundation of the
address? Who is the author? • Author’s credentials.• Contact information.
Is the material copyrighted?
Evaluating Web Sites
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Is the information on the page documented? • Look for references to books, articles, or sites.• What sites does this site link to?• Are links active or broken?
Are there many advertisements on the page? Is grammar and spelling correct? Is the website updated regularly? What is the purpose of the website?• To inform. To persuade. To sell a product. To give
voice to an opinion.
Evaluating Web Sites
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Remember to use the expertise of librarians,
professors, thinkers, and writers to help you find quality sources of information.
Subject Guides, pathfinders, research guides, bibliographies, and resource pages are excellent tools produced by these people to help you find the best information.
Remember that evaluation of information is a matter of asking yourself particular questions about a source.
Conclusion