Sunday, September 30, 2012

Why Kids Can’t Search?


  • By bdagosti
  • 12:30 pm 

We’re often told that young people tend to be the most tech-savvy among us. But just how savvy are they? A group of researchers led by College of Charleston business professor Bing Pan tried to find out. Specifically, Pan wanted to know how skillful young folks are at online search. His team gathered a group of college students and asked them to look up the answers to a handful of questions. Perhaps not surprisingly, the students generally relied on the web pages at the top of Google’s results list.
But Pan pulled a trick: He changed the order of the results for some students. More often than not, those kids went for the bait and also used the (falsely) top-ranked pages. Pan grimly concluded that students aren’t assessing information sources on their own merit—they’re putting too much trust in the machine.
Other studies have found the same thing: High school and college students may be “digital natives,” but they’re wretched at searching. In a recent experiment at Northwestern, when 102 undergraduates were asked to do some research online, none went to the trouble of checking the authors’ credentials. In 1955, we wondered why Johnny can’t read. Today the question is, why can’t Johnny search?
Who’s to blame? Not the students. If they’re naive at Googling, it’s because the ability to judge information is almost never taught in school. Under 2001′s No Child Left Behind Act, elementary and high schools focus on prepping their pupils for reading and math exams. And by the time kids get to college, professors assume they already have this skill. The buck stops nowhere. This situation is surpassingly ironic, because not only is intelligent search a key to everyday problem-solving, it also offers a golden opportunity to train kids in critical thinking.
Consider the efforts of Frances Harris, librarian at the magnet University Laboratory High School in Urbana, Illinois. (Librarians are our national leaders in this fight; they’re the main ones trying to teach search skills to kids today.) Harris educates eighth and ninth graders in how to format nuanced queries using Boolean logic and advanced settings. She steers them away from raw Google searches and has them use academic and news databases, too.
But, crucially, she also trains students to assess the credibility of what they find online. For example, she teaches them to analyze the tone of a web page to judge whether it was created by an academic, an advocacy group, or a hobbyist. Students quickly gain the ability to detect if a top-ranked page about Martin Luther King Jr. was actually posted by white supremacists.
“I see them start to get really paranoid,” Harris says. “The big thing in assessing search results is authorship—who put it there and why have they put it there?” Or, as pioneering librarian Buffy Hamilton at Creekview High School near Atlanta says, “This is learning how to learn.”
One can imagine even more entertaining ways to help kids grok the intricacies of the search world. Why not let students start a class blog on a subject and see how long it takes for it to show up in search results?
Mind you, mastering “crap detection 101,” as digital guru Howard Rheingold dubs it, isn’t easy. One prerequisite is that you already know a lot about the world. For instance, Harris found that students had difficulty distinguishing a left-wing parody of the World Trade Organization’s website from the real WTO site. Why? Because you need to understand why someone would want to parody it in the first place—knowledge the average eighth grader does not yet possess.
In other words, Google makes broad-based knowledge more important, not less. A good education is the true key to effective search. But until our kids have that, let’s make sure they don’t always take PageRank at its word.

17 comments:

  1. google searches are usually best for general information and not Details

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  2. and also obviously we will use the sites at the top of the page to find our information first it’s the most convenient

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  3. we usually pick out the first thing on google not just because we trust it, it's because it doesn't give us enough information in the description to know what it's all about. We usually go into it to do some more research. It can be a productive search if we put the time into reading it.

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    1. i agree with you. if you don't take the time to read it you could put down a link to a website that has nothing to do with what you searched in the first place.

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    2. I never pick just the first thing that pops up. I think most kids will look through a few articles and if they all match up they pick one. that way they make sure they are right.

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  4. These days when a kid is given an assignment of course they are gonna go to the internet. Its the EASIEST and FASTEST way to do anything. Who would go to the library for research when you can have it at your finger tips in seconds?

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  5. The top page is the page that most matches the typed words so ods are if you search "list of colors" and a website called
    "all the colors comes up on top you would probably look on that page first.

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  6. I think that people who grow up with technology become so used to it, they see it as a source that is always right. What they fail to realize is that it is not consistently correct.

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  7. not all kids cant search. and maybe the kidswho cant just dont know how to..

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  8. When they say "Why cant johnny search", they are acting like its a skill like readind that everyone has to learn but you really dont need to use the internet you can still go to the librarry and read a book on cows instead of googling it.

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  9. People who use the internet for information are people who are lazy and can not tell if the info is correct. They do not realize that the information on the internet can be changed into something that is not correct.

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  10. There are a lot of things on google, including many different research papers and book written by credited people. So it's not like you can say that some things on google are not a good source.

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  11. I think kids should learn how to search for information better then what we learn so far we normally rely on wiki and that's in my opinion a great website.

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  12. The internet is very convenient, and there is always information ready at your disposal. But to be able to tell if it is the right? How could you know if the information is accurate when you yourself are looking it us because you want to learn more about it? If you are not able to trust internet sites because it might have false information, then why do we use it?

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  13. Most kids are smarter then some parents when it comes to technology. If something new comes out and your parents get it and has no idea how to run it, give it to you kid. They will figure it out

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  14. Sometimes the internet dosent answer the question your trying to ask. Its not always a reliable sourse. But usually it is easier to just go on the internet look up a question and take the closest answer possible.

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  15. maybe they arent asking the right question

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