1) After completing the MAPping information activity, what are your reactions to your findings? What will you do differently while searching on the Internet for information now? How confident are you with the information you've used in the past (as part of your college career and/or in your profession)?
I answered 8 of the 10 questions in this quiz correctly without resorting to any of the resources on the page. I would have answered all 10 correctly except for 2 things. 1) I did not recognize every single domain abbreviation, and 2) I blanked out on how to find out who is linked to your own website.
I feel fairly confident about the information that I have used in the past, but will definitely work to ensure that my information is more reliable and accurate in the future. I have frequently clicked on sites that were not at all what their descriptions suggested that they were. Had I taken a few seconds to look over their URLs before clicking on them, I would have saved some time and not helped those sites to rise in the search ranks. In the future, I will take more time to review URLs before clicking on them and also to review the source of information a bit more carefully before making use of it.
2) What are some implications for the future of our students if we fail to teach them these skills in school? After all, the schools may block access to sites, but students still have access at home.
Anyone who is not cognizant of these search/research skills will likely just accept any site on their topic as being authoritative simply because it is “published” and not simply word of mouth. Our students need to be taught these skills in order to help them find and use valid information and to help them to avoid perpetuating mis-information/dis-information.
3) Do you see any advantages for organizing your information via Delicious? What else did you find when exploring the other bookmarking applications? What are some ways you think you could use tools like these in the future?
There are multiple advantages to organizing information using Delicious or other such social bookmarking sites. Among them are having information available at all times and places where you have access to the web (virtually everywhere these days), not worrying about losing your information and bookmarks if your computer crashes before you have had a chance to save your bookmarks to an outside storage device, having the ability to achieve collaborative research on multiple topics as an ongoing project without even having to formally setup that collaboration.
a) I have seen people attempt to take their bookmarks with them by saving them to a flashdrive, or having their home computer accessible remotely, etc. But, when they get to where they need to use those bookmarks, they find that the computer they need to access them on does not have usable USB ports, or that the network that computer is on does not allow remote computer access, or their home computer has been shutdown during a power failure, etc. I have even gone through some of these and other scenarios myself. That is why I started using Delicious to store most of my bookmarks over two years ago. This way, as long as I have access to the internet, I have access to the bookmarks that I might want to use anywhere other than on my home computer. Another thing this allows me to do, is to have access to those bookmarks via multiple devices without having to save those links to all the devices where I might want to access them.
b) I had a collection of about 500 bookmarks on a previous desktop computer. Those were bookmarks that I would not likely have wanted to use anywhere else, but I did not appreciate losing them when my hard drive completely fried. If I had put those bookmarks on a social bookmarking site, I would still have access to them today.
c) Some of my bookmarks are designated as accessible to my network so that others can use them and add to the collection of resources under those categories. This way, I don’t even have to ask them to collaborate on research for projects in those categories. Rather, the fact that they are topics those people are already interested in creates an open invitation to collaborate.
4) In reviewing and dissecting the URL http://www.bigredhair.com/robots/index.html I found that this is likely a personal website because of the domain “bigredhair.com” and the avatar/picture at the bottom of the page. The extension “.com” is another clue that this is likely not either an educational or other academic site. This extension is typically used for commercial enterprises and the majority of services that allow individuals to set up their own sites with little or no limit on the content they can post there. The information past the first slash gives little information other than that the site is about robots, which is also in the title of the website. Also, in examining the history of the site, I found that the site has been around since about 2002 and has changed very little in the intervening years. In fact, after about May 2008, there have been no changes reported on the site. It seems likely that any site that valid and useful would involve more changes and updates than what is seen on this site.