4. Page 250 in your text Scholarly Legitimate 1. Researching with books and printed material
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11. Where to begin… Look through your invention notes and begin finding specific terms you would like to research or the new refined topic Searching the Internet
12. Idea from notes: While it is true that meat provides crucial nutritional value to one’s diet, a vegetarian can still obtain these items while still excluding meat from one’s diet. Key ideas: nutritional value, meat, vegetarian Searching the Internet
13. Americans often eat too much meat because they are constantly surrounded by images of fast food and advertisements. Fast food Images Advertising: Who does the advertising? Media: Who sells the ads to the media? Corporations Searching the Internet
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15. Search Engines Search engines ask for keywords or phrases and then search the Web for results. www.google.com www.yahoo.com www.msn.com www.lycos.com www.altavista.com Searching the Internet
19. Searching the Internet Select your terms carefully Using inexact terms or terms that are too general will cause you problems. If your early searches turn up too many references, try to find more specific terms, use boolean operators, or do an advanced search.
20. Americans often eat too much meat because they are constantly surrounded by images of fast food and advertisements. Fast food Images Advertising: Who does the advertising? Media: Who sells the ads to the media? Corporations Searching the Internet
21. Boolean Terms- Language that refines searches AND OR NOT ~ tilde + or - * - Fill in the blank Searching the Internet
22. AND AND is the most useful and most important term. It tells the search engine to find your first word AND your second word or term. Fast food AND corporations AND advertising Searching the Internet
23. OR Use OR when a key term may appear in two different ways. Academy Awards OR Oscars Searching the Internet
24. NEAR NEAR is a term that can only be used on some search engines, and it can be very useful. It tells the search engine to find documents with both words but only when they appear near each other, usually within a few words. Fast food NEAR advertising Searching the Internet
25. NOT NOT tells the search engine to find a reference that contains one term but not the other. This is useful when a term refers to multiple concepts. Keller Williams NOT Real-estate Searching the Internet
26. Searching the Internet ~ tilde: ~corporation ~advertising + or -: advertising +effects * - Fill in the blank: advertising is*
28. Searching the Internet Fast food effects +consumers advertising corporations
29. Searching the Internet Fast food effects +consumers advertising corporations
30. Searching the Internet Fast food effects +consumers advertising corporations
31. Searching the Internet Meta-Search Engines These search other search engines and often search smaller, less well known search engines and specialized sites. These search engines are good for doing large, sweeping searches of what information is out there.
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35. Searching the Internet Web Directories Web directories (also known as indexes, web indexes or catalogues) are broken down into categories and sub-categories and are good for broad searches of established sites.
36. Searching the Internet Web Directories Web directories (also known as indexes, web indexes or catalogues) are broken down into categories and sub-categories and are good for broad searches of established sites.
37. Searching the Internet Web Directories Web directories (also known as indexes, web indexes or catalogues) are broken down into categories and sub-categories and are good for broad searches of established sites.
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47. Searching the Internet Taking Notes Page 253 in your text
48. Ho me work Begin locating three good sources for topic (use the library or the Internet). Begin reading and taking good notes. Page 264 (Use of Quotations) - 274