Ten Tips for Searching on Google - Richard Byrne
Search within a Search result
- One of the worst offenses students commit while conducting web searches is only glancing at the webpages they open from the search results page. Or worse yet, only reading the brief snippet that appears below the links in a search results page. The reason for this behavior that students often give is “it takes too long to read the whole page.” To remedy this teach your students to use “Control F” (Windows) or “Command F” (Mac) when they open a webpage from the search results page. Control F or Command F allows you to search within any webpage for any letter, word, or phrase. This also works for searching within PDFs and other documents that students may download during a web search.
Open the advanced search menu.
- The advanced search menu is often overlooked by students. It is found by opening the gear/ sprocket icon that appears in the upper right corner of the search results page. In that menu you will find tools for refining search results by file type, domain, language, and more. Here’s a demo of how to refine search results according to date. This video demonstrates how to search by file type.
Search Google Books & Newspapers
- Google Books indexes millions of books and periodicals that you can search within. Many books and periodicals are available to read online for free. The Google News Newspaper Archive has digitized hundreds of old newspapers that you can search through. Here’s a demo of Google Books.
https://practicaledtech.com/2019/09/16/ten-google-search-tips-for-students/
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