Evaluating+Websites

On this page, I will show you some different websites that help explain how to evaluate websites. Click on the link to learn more.

[]

Cornell University Library- The website talks about how to read a website for accurate information and how to read a url address.

[]

Multnomah County Library- The site focuses on who made the webpage and if there is a variety of ads.

[]

UC Berkeley- Teaching Library Internet Workshops- The website discusses how to check a url address and looking for credentials of the author

media type="custom" key="24471502" width="53" height="53"

My partner and I decided to do the historic Michigan vs Ohio State rivalry because we knew there would be a variety of sources. We focused on 5 main points to help decide if the two websites we chose were reliable.

Avoiding Plagarism- Sources from Kaci, Addie, and Allana!

The clone- using somebody else’s work and saying it is your own Find replace- using some different words of your own but keeping the same idea that is not yours Remix- using info from several different sources that are made to fit together Recycle- using your own previous work generously without citation 404 errors- includes citations nonexistent or inaccurate info about the source Cite- show evidence of where you got your information Quoting- use a quote exactly the way it appears without changing anything Plagarism is the deliberate use of someone's work to your own advantage.

<iframe src=" [|https://docs.zoho.com/show/published.do?rid=o319t4e1c28fe6a8847068dfcb673f11d4399&toolbar=true&menu=false&loop=true]

Above was an example of what my classmates and I did in class. Below, is the rest of the topics we covered.

1. Popular Social Media Sites 2. Yelp 3. Copyright and fair use 4. Prezi (Web 2.0 tool) 5. Apple vs Microsoft 6. Assistive Technologies 7. Google Apps and Google Hangouts

Lastly, we all know forging work is illegial. Please just take into consideration the copyright rules and be a good digital citizen! :)