LIB 160 final

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For each of these research situations, indicate whether "any year" or "last 2 years" would be a better type of date limit to use: You want to find articles about current options in consumer electronics. Your instructor has assigned you to find recent research relating to the course topic. Your assignment is to make a timeline of major developments in your field of study. You want to find scholarly research about an event that happened seventy years ago.

2 years 2 years any year any year

A friend posts on social media that they won't get a vaccine because it will cause abnormal lymph nodes. Which of the following is the best thing to do next if you want to respond to this post? Do a Google search to find where the claim comes from. Immediately share the post with your other friends & followers. Check how many likes and comments the post has received. Immediately post that the claim is doubtful. Check the claim by searching a different social media platform.

Do a Google search to find where the claim comes from.

You find a source on your topic that makes points that sound convincing, but the author does not indicate where the information came from. According to Chapter 4, what is the most likely type of bias that applies? Absence of balance Algorithmic bias Framing Correct answer: Flawed sourcing Tone

Flawed sourcing

Indicate which of the strategies below is a good practice for building a professional presence online: Keep professional social networking communities updated with your academic accomplishments. Only update your professional social media once you have graduated. Remember that you can always delete online content if it doesn't match how you want to present yourself. Don't share anything about your professional plans in case you switch your career plans later. Encourage your friends to tag you in party photos they post to social media.

Keep professional social networking communities updated with your academic accomplishments.

Using what you know about Wikipedia contributors from this chapter, give TWO reasons why you might want to use an additional source. Majority of Wikipedia contributors do not have advanced degrees. Wikipedia articles are not traditionally peer reviewed. Answer,Wikipedia contributors are all from the US. Answer,Wikipedia contributors tend to be from the life sciences only.

Majority of Wikipedia contributors do not have advanced degrees. Wikipedia articles are not traditionally peer reviewed.

Which of the approaches below should you use to evaluate a scholarly resource? Check the place of publication to see what country the journal is published in. Read the methods section to better understand how the research was conducted. Make sure that the paper has colorful graphics and tables. Check to see if the journal is peer reviewed and has a good scholarly reputation.

No Yes No Yes

You read an interesting news report about research on a new medical treatment. Which information from the news story could you search to help find the original source of the information? The name of the news report author together with the headline of the news report The name of the organization where the research was done The name of a researcher quoted in the news report A "more like this" link on the news source website

No Yes Yes No

What type of publication, scholarly or popular, do the descriptions on the left column represent? Usually include lengthy bibliographies. Footnotes and bibliographies are rarely used. Takes more time to produce because of the review process. Written for the general public.

Scholarly Popular Scholarly Popular

Chapter 2 describes different ways to find journal articles. Which of the following features is ONLY found in subject-specific article indexes, but is NOT found in general purpose article indexes: Searching by format (e.g. books, articles, and chapters) Search features useful for a wide range of subjects Advanced and simple search options Search features customized to a subject area Abstracts that summarize each item

Search features customized to a subject area

Chapter 1 discusses primary and secondary sources. How are primary sources most useful for a project or paper? It's a good idea to include peer-reviewed material in scholarly projects They are some of the best sources for statistics and data They are the first materials you should consult for a scholarly project They are considered to be more authoritative than secondary sources It may be useful to document a historic event with perspectives from that time

They are considered to be more authoritative than secondary sources I think this question blows

What is the main purpose of field searching? To broaden your search and let you find more results To find item records with publication date in the last year To find your keywords in the part of the record you want them to match To focus your search when a database doesn't have an advanced search screen To find item records with a specific length

To find your keywords in the part of the record you want them to match

When you're investigating a source for your research, you might observe features that indicate the source is likely to be trustworthy or untrustworthy. Other features can be inconclusive—not helpful in deciding to use the source or not. For each of the following, answer whether it's a sign of a trustworthy source, an untrustworthy source, or inconclusive. Key (Trust Untrust, inconclusive) The publishing company that produced it has a good reputation. A Google search shows the author is employed by a large corporation. The tone of the source is sensationalized and insulting. Most websites that comment on it disagree with what it says about its purpose.

Trust Inconclusive Untrust untrust

What should you do if you do not understand most of the content being described in an article's abstract? Try to power through it and hope you understand by the time you get to the conclusion. Skip to the conclusion; if you understand it, that's all you need. Look for older articles because those will be simpler. Use a different article that you can actually understand. Use quotes from the article in your paper, even if you don't understand them

Use a different article that you can actually understand.

According to Chapter 4, does a website with a top-level domain of .com need to be evaluated? Yes, because domain tells you where a site comes from but doesn't guarantee quality. No, because it's there to do business, not to promote a cause or opinion. No, because it's provided by a respectable communications organization. No, because successful companies are trustworthy. Yes, because it's definitely trying to sell you something. \

Yes, because domain tells you where a site comes from but doesn't guarantee quality.

Now you want to upload your Taylor Swift fan video to YouTube. Would you be violating copyright? Yes, because you didn't get copyright permissions when making the video publicly available. No, because the purpose was to teach others about how great Taylor Swift is and that's fair use. No, because you personally will not be making any money or other profits off of the video. No, because you correctly cited where you found the images and sound files in the video description. Yes, because nothing on YouTube is considered fair use or for educational purposes.

Yes, because you didn't get copyright permissions when making the video publicly available.

When searching for sources, why is it important to include keywords for each of the essential concepts that make up your research question? Using every keyword helps you find every information format you need, like statistics or news Using every keyword in one search will bring you every source on your topic Using every essential concept will bring you only authoritative sources You should plan to get the best information you can in your first search combination Using every essential concept keeps your search more focused

You should plan to get the best information you can in your first search combination idk this question blows

You know that using style manuals helps you prepare your footnotes and reference lists for your papers. According to Chapter 5, which of these is a good reason to use a style manual? Your professor will know which index or database you used. Your bibliography will include all the best sources. Your paper will look more scholarly and authoritative. Your paper will match the expected structure for writing in your field

Your paper will match the expected structure for writing in your field

You've read in Chapter 5 that common knowledge does not have to be cited in your scholarly work. For each of the following examples, indicate whether it's common knowledge or needs to be cited. Multiple sclerosis starts in young adulthood and most often in females, according to research. The Macintosh computer was created by Apple, Inc. The Declaration of Independence was signed on July 4, 1776. Graduate students in college think dualistically.

cite common common cite

Match the following descriptions to the appropriate items. Factual information that can easily be verified. Law that determines how authors' works can be reused. Someone else's words or ideas used without credit. Authors determine how their works can be reused.

common copyright plagerism creative common lisence

It's important to know what a citation represents because that often helps you find the item. What does the following citation represent? Amini, N. et al. (2020). Design and Evaluation of a Wearable Assistive Technology for Hemianopic Stroke Patients. Proceedings of the 2020 International Symposium on Wearable Computers, 7-11. conference proceedings a book chapter a journal a book a journal article

conference proceedings

How can you tell if article is open or not

it tells you usually left corner

Burin, D., Kilteni, K., Rabuffetti, M., Slater, M., & Pia, L. (2019). Body ownership increases the interference between observed and executed movements. PLOS ONE, 14(1), Article e0209899. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209899 conference proceedings a book chapter a journal a book a journal article

journal

Truncation is a search technique that helps you find variations of a term or terms. You want to find books on the topic of manufacturing insulation or insulating materials, but not insulin. Where should you best truncate in this example? manufacturing and insuli* manufacturing and ins* manufacturing and insul* manufacturing and insulat* Truncation will be less useful for this search.

manufacturing and insulat*

You're hoping to prove that a photo you saw on social media is fake. To check the source of the image, which steps are useful, according to Chapter 4?\ Challenge the person who posted the image to prove it's real Save the image to your computer so you can check the file properties Copy the image into Google Image Search to find when it was first available online Search fact-checking sites with keywords that describe the image

no no useful useful

It is easy to get lost exploring different resources while doing your research. According to SIFT, what do you need to do to help you to stay on task? Limit your search to only websites with .edu or .org domains. Explore the most interesting resources even if they are only tangentially related to your topic. Consider the types of information you need for your research project. Think about your needs and whether those resources meet them.

no no yes yes

You want to find out about new developments in road materials for extremely cold conditions. Since this is a complex topic, you want to break it down into its main concepts to help identify keywords that could help you search. Are the keywords below examples of the essential concepts from this topic? Are the keywords below examples of the essential concepts from this topic? Developments Road Materials Cold

non essential essential essential Essential

Chapter 5 discusses ways you can control use/reuse of your own scholarly creations. Indicate whether the statements below are true or false. Your original works are automatically protected by copyright. No one else can hold a copyright to something you created. You still hold the copyright for works you put a Creative Commons license on. You can modify all other works that have Creative Commons licensing.

true false true false

Why is it important to keep track of your sources when you work on a research project? Organizing your sources helps you be more efficient in the process of writing Your professors will all require you to use citation manager software or apps You will have an easier time citing and giving credit to your sources Organizing your sources is a requirement for graduation

yes no yes no

Which of the following are ways Wikipedia can be useful to you when you are developing your research question? You can find links from the Wikipedia article about your topic to reliable sources online and in journals. Wikipedia is useful for historical research because it is considered to be a primary source. You can find dates and timelines for past events in Wikipedia and use this information to help you search in other sources. You can quote the Wikipedia article about your topic and use it in your paper's reference list.

yes no yes no

According to Chapter 5, which of the following should you do when selecting a style manual for your paper? Check with a subject specialist librarian about what's used in your major. First check if you can find a style manual for free, and use that one. Ask your professor if they require a particular style manual. Use the style manual you were taught in high school.

yes no yes no

As you learned in Chapter 3, many search tools offer Simple and Advanced Search options. Which of these search options are best to use when you... need more control over how to structure your search want to limit your search to a certain date range want to do an initial exploration of what's available are looking for information on a broad topic

Advanced advanced simple simple

You created a fan video on Taylor Swift for your music appreciation class. You've used photographs you found online along with one of her songs and cited each appropriately. Did you violate copyright law? Yes, because the video was not licensed through the library. No, the video was created for educational purposes and thus probably fair use. Yes, because you did not acquire copyright permissions first. No, because you did not make any money off of the video. Yes, this is a classic example of copyright infringement

No, the video was created for educational purposes and thus probably fair use.

Chapter 1 points out that a good research question should be focused. Which of these topics are focused and which are too broad? The development of the steelpan drum and the music of Trinidad and Tobago How musical genres have developed over time A comparison of ancient sports contests and the modern Olympic games The trends that can be seen in recent sponsorships for Olympic athletes

Focused broad Broad Focused

Your instructor tells you to "find one source from a peer-reviewed journal" for a short class assignment. Which of the following sources should you use? A news article your classmate shared during class discussion A new issue of a scholarly journal with information from all the articles in that issue An article from a scholarly journal that subject experts critiqued before publication A blog entry written by your instructor with comments from other scholars added to it A diary entry written by an important person from history, edited carefully before being published

An article from a scholarly journal that was critiqued by subject experts before publication

Journals are published on an ongoing basis at regular intervals and consist of volumes, issues, and articles. Match the elements of a journal to its description. You must get all three choices correct to earn full point on this question. A paper describing a research or scholarly topic. Typically includes all issues from one year. A set of articles published together at the same time.

Article Volume Issue

When you commit plagiarism, you may: Be taken to court by the publisher. Be sent a bill by the copyright holder. Be fined by ISU for ruining the school's reputation. Be arrested or even tried by a federal court. Be expelled from ISU or fail your course

Be expelled from ISU or fail your course

Which of the choices below is NOT a factor in determining what is fair use of an existing work? How will the new item be used? Does the new work affect how much money can be made from the original work? Does the new work cite paraphrased ideas from the original work? Was the original work mostly factual or mostly creative?

Does the new work cite paraphrased ideas from the original work?

Chapter 2 discusses three major information finding tools; web search engines, library discovery tools, and article indexes. Why would you use multiple-finding tools when looking for information? To avoid the temptation of using only one finding tool during your information-gathering process No need to use multiple finding tools; Google finds everything you need on your research topic. To make sure you find every possible source that addresses your topic at all Each can help you find different sets of sources for a more complete understanding of the topic To find all relevant news sources and websites on your research topic

Each can help you find different sets of sources for a more complete understanding of the topic

What does it mean for an article to be peer-reviewed? Your classmates agree you picked a good source to use for a project. Experts in the same subject as the author critiqued the article. The article is available through a peer-to-peer sharing network. Several authors who are peers of each other co-wrote the article. The article has been "liked" on social media.

Experts in the same subject as the author critiqued the article.

Why is it important to cite other people's work in your research? Citing sources will make your paper look more important and increase its length. Citing sources shows that the original author, not you, is responsible for errors in your argument. Citing sources shows that your argument is supported by previous research. Citing sources shows your readers where the ideas you used came from.

False False True True

Indicate True or False to the below statements regarding why it is important to research the reputation of a source. You need to make sure your source completely agrees with your argument. Ensuring the information is hosted on a trustworthy domain, such as .org, will strengthen your research Anyone can present themselves as an expert on a topic, whether or not that is actually the case. Learning about how and what a source has published in the past can give insight into whether you can trust them.

False false True True

Quick Search lets you refine or narrow your search results using links on the right side of the screen. Do a search on nanomaterials. What are some criteria that can refine your search results in Quick Search? By tags By availability By topic By number of versions

False true True False

For each of the following, indicate whether the statement about Interlibrary Loan (ILL) is true or false ILL materials are posted online for anyone to use ILL is an example of libraries working together to keep costs down ILL requires you to pay to borrow items from other libraries The ILL service can be used by ISU undergrad students

False true false true

You're reading a source for your project and find a claim about the topic that is new to you. Which of the following are good examples of how to do lateral reading to check this claim? Follow any links back to the original source of the claim. See if the same author makes the claim in other sources. Don't waste time checking the author or publication, just check the claim. See if any fact-checking sites have already checked it.

Good bad bad Good

For the topics listed below, indicate which finding tool would be the best choice: Google or Google Scholar? News articles about medal winners in the 2014 Winter Olympic Games. Peer-reviewed articles giving economic predictions about future trends in the sports industry. Articles discussing the "living history" museum movement to use as sources for a paper for an anthropology course. Information on upcoming events at Living History Farms, an open-air museum located near Des Moines, Iowa.

Gooogle Scholar Scholar Google

What does "fair use" mean regarding copyrighted works? Fair use only applies to copyrighted items used in an educational setting. Any use of a work with a Creative Commons license is fair. Several people created the work together and split any profits fairly. In some circumstances, copyrighted material can legally be used for free. If every fact you use in a paper is common knowledge, you don't have to cite copyrighted sources

In some circumstances, copyrighted material can legally be used for free.

According to Chapter 2 each of the three major finding tools helps you find specific types of resources. Which one of the finding tools listed on the drop-down menu is the best choice for finding... wordbank-(Indexes and databases, Web search engines, Library discovery tools) in-depth research articles on a specific topic up-to-date information and news resources that a specific library owns

Indexes and databases Web search engine Library discovery

As described in Chapter 1, which ONE of the following best characterizes what is meant by "scholarly information"? All materials owned by libraries are scholarly in essence Academic textbooks for college courses and scholars like you Publications that are owned by more than one library Information that is neither primary nor secondary source material

Information that is neither primary nor secondary source material

Andreff, W. (2000). The evolving European model of professional sports finance. Journal of Sports Economics, 1(3), 257-276. https://doi.org/10.1177/152700250000100304 conference proceedings a book chapter a journal a book a journal article

Journal article

While doing research for a paper, the first article you found is one you think is trustworthy. According to SIFT, after investigating the article, what should you do next? Look at other articles on different topics from the same source. Stop. If you've already investigated the author you don't need to look farther. Look for more and better articles about this topic published in other sources. Use the ViewIt@ISU tool to get a printed copy from another library. Check to see if you recognize the publisher's name from your course's textbook.

Look for more and better articles about this topic published in other sources.

What is the benefit of using a Creative Commons license? Makes clear the conditions for reusing original work. Shows the creativity and originality that went into your project. States what payment is expected when others use a copyrighted work. Tells you how to ask permission to use copyrighted works. Shows that your shared work is based on other people's work.

Makes clear the conditions for reusing original work.

Match each description below with the correct part of a scholarly article Key (MEthod, results, conclusion, abstract) How the author(s) did their investigations and analysis The most detail on what was discovered during the research process Focuses on the key findings and possibly future research directions Summary of the article found at the beginning

Methods Results conclusion abstract

Match each source to the type of information it contains. Keywords (Background News Stats) The New York Times website Encyclopedia of Microbiology The Wikipedia page on the Greek alphabet The U.S. Census website

News Background Background Stats

Which of the following factors are important to keep in mind when choosing resources for a research project? Important or no How many books were published on your topic in the last year You prefer using articles over books How in-depth your paper or presentation needs to be. Your instructor's requirement that you use 5 peer-reviewed sources.

No No Important Important

Chapter 1 discusses how to get started with research and the information-seeking process. According to the chapter, which of the following is important to consider when getting started? Yes or no Which Library of Congress call numbers apply to your topic How much information is available online What the essential concepts are for your topic Whether your research question is well developed

No No Yes Yes

According to Chapter 2, which of the following can you do with Quick Search? Access all features even if you're not logged in Search for laptops and other equipment to check out. Use advanced search filters Search for e-books

No No Yes Yes

You have found a description in an article database for an article you want to read. The full text is not in the database, but there is a Get it@ISU button. What will happen when you click this button? The call number for the print version of the journal will display if ISU has a subscription. Since the Get it@ISU button is in the record, when it's clicked the PDF will open automatically. One or more links to the article will display if ISU has access to it. A citation of the article will be sent to your ISU email. The article will automatically print if you are using a library computer.

One or more links to the article will display if ISU has access to it.

You're discussing a course assignment with a classmate. She tells you she plans to reuse a paper she wrote for another class last year. According to Chapter 5, when would this be acceptable? Only if the class is not using plagiarism detection software. Only if she hasn't reused this paper already. Always, because this would be considered common knowledge. Only if the instructor is aware and has given consent.

Only if the instructor is aware and has given consent.

This chapter discusses the difference between open web material and paywalled resources. For each item below, indicate if it describes Open or Paywalled resource. you can view the resource regardless of your affiliation the resource requires you to log in or pay a subscription fee your access to the resource depends on being enrolled at ISU the resource is free to access for anyone

Open paywalled Paywalled Open

Why is peer review an important part of the publication process for scholarly information? Peer review speeds up the journal publication process Peer review is more affordable because it does not require an editor Peer review allows journals to publish articles written by non-experts Peer review assists authors in the early planning of their articles Peer review draws on the expertise of others to strengthen research

Peer review draws on the expertise of others to strengthen research

If you discover the ISU Library does not have access to an article you need, what is your next best option? Place a request through the library's Interlibrary Loan service Check with staff at Circulation to see if they can order it for the ISU Library Use the library's Special Collections services Look for the article on the web with a good search engine, such as Google You need to change your topic to find something that the library owns

Place a request though the library's Interlibrary Loan service

A research assignment requires you to use sources published in the last 10 years, and at least seven of them need to be peer-reviewed articles. So far, you have found one useful peer-reviewed article by the author A.B. Cee, published 3 years ago. If the following sources all cover your research topic, which are relevant for the assignment? A recent article you found by searching with a new set of keywords from Cee's article A video where Cee describes early findings in their newest research A news release where Cee gives a shorter explanation of the research project from the article An article from 15 years ago that Cee cited in their article

Relevant Relevant Not Not

Which of the following best describes scholarly book chapters? Final chapters of fiction books that bring the story and themes to a conclusion Introductory chapter that describes the book and its content Chapters from course textbooks Research papers with a common theme, published together in a book Introduction chapters for nonfiction books explaining why the author chose the book's topic

Research papers with a common theme, published together in a book

you are searching for information about differences in squirrel populations in rural vs. urban areas. You find some alternate keywords and group them by related concepts like this: Squirrel, Sciurus (name of a squirrel genus) Rural, urban, location, geographic Population, prevalence, density Compare the following two sets of keywords: Sciurus Squirrel population prevalence or Sciurus geographic density Which option below should find more useful search results and why? Sciurus Squirrel population prevalence since it includes more words to give more matches Sciurus Squirrel population prevalence since it includes both the common name and Latin name for squirrels Sciurus Squirrel population prevalence since it includes the important topic of "squirrel population" Sciurus geographic density since it will give the best statistics for density Sciurus geographic density since it includes a keyword from each of the three essential concepts

Sciurus geographic density since it includes a keyword from each of the three essential concepts

The first move of SIFT includes a reminder to check your emotional reactions as you do research. Indicate TWO reasons why this is helpful: You make a stronger case when you pick sources with unexciting research results Sources that make you question your assumptions about a topic can be helpful Answer,A source that you feel negatively about won't be relevant for your research Verifying whether a source is true is important regardless of how you feel about its claims

Sources that make you question your assumptions about a topic can be helpful Verifying whether a source is true is important regardless of how you feel about its claims

What are the four moves of SIFT as given in Chapter 4? Summarize information - Inform others - Fix any errors - Transform knowledge Stop - Investigate the source - Find better coverage - Trace information back Subject -- Illustrator/Author -- Format -- Title Search - Information - Filters - Treatment Simple search - Improve keywords - Field searching - Tweak my results

Stop - Investigate the source - Find better coverage - Trace information back

Chapter 3 discusses searching by specific fields. Click the Advanced Search link under the Quick Search box. In the Advanced Search area select the correct field drop-down menu option to use for finding items. Key (Author creator, Any field, subject, Title) about spiritual retreats written by American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics about the topic of fungi and written by the Royal Botanic Gardens that include the words "beta-carotene" and "cancer prevention" in the title

Subject Author Any field Title

You're writing a paper on the impact of poverty on early childhood education. You've gotten information for your paper from a book, an article, a website, and an infographic. Indicate which of these you need to cite: All of these are common knowledge and don't need to be cited. The infographic. The website, the book, and the article. The book and the article. The book, article, website, and infographic all need to be cited

The book, article, website, and infographic all need to be cited

What is the main reason a sponsored link gets placed at the top of web search engine results? The search engine company is paid to place it at the top. Search engines have algorithms to rank relevancy, so websites most relevant to your search get placed at the top. Websites are ranked by the search engine, with the best at the top. These are the most visited websites. The search engine promotes them as innovative examples.

The search engine company is paid to place it at the top.

What is the main purpose of an index as discussed in Chapter 2? To list all the articles that have been published in one journal, organized by date. To help you find where important words and topics are located within a book. To help you find articles on your subject. To serve as a finding tool that tells which journals a library has on subscription. To help you quickly find books on a topic of interest.

To help you find articles on your subject.

In addition to avoiding misinformation, what is another reason you should evaluate the information you use? To check that the resources you want to use are paywalled and thus scholarly. To help you sort your search results in Google Scholar more effectively. To avoid using resources that are aimed at a general audience instead of a scholarly one. To make sure that the sources you want to use add something useful to your project. To make sure that you only share information from older, more experienced authors.

To make sure that the sources you want to use add something useful to your project.

Indicate whether the statements below about Google Scholar are true or false. As an ISU student, you can access paywalled articles the Library owns in your Google Scholar search results. You can find a variety of scholarly materials with Google Scholar. Google Scholar covers scholarly materials only from paywalled sites, not from the open web. You will need to customize Settings in Google Scholar to connect to ISU Library resources.

True True False true

According to Chapter 5, which of the following must you do when correctly paraphrasing? Use quotation marks if you use some of the same words as the original author. Agree with the original author. Cite the source. Use quotation marks when you change the original author's words.

True false true false

According to Chapter 5, what is the definition of plagiarism? Copying more than five words of a quotation without citing it. Sharing old assignments, or allowing others to copy your work. Sharing class notes or study questions with classmates for a group project. Using someone else's words or ideas without giving credit to that person.

Using someone else's words or ideas without giving credit to that person

Using the Material Type drop-down menu in Quick Search's Advanced Search, which search strategy is the most efficient and effective to find the following: Key (videos, articles, all items, Books) Streaming videos on mathematics Journal articles on sunspots Anything & everything possible with search terms "marsupials south america" Books on the Northern Ireland Assembly

Videos articles all items books

You are researching an election that took place in another country last week. Based on what you have learned about the flow of information, which of these types of information sources can you expect to find about this? photos or video from the event news reports made about the event books describing the impact of the event scholarly articles analyzing the event

Yes Yes No No

When using direct quotes, you should: Give a citation for the original source of every direct quote. Quote the longest section possible to give more context. Use quotation marks whenever words or phrases were used in a distinctive way. Not use quotation marks unless you use ten or more words in a row.

Yes no yes no

You and a friend disagree about something and both look it up with the same keywords and the same search engine, but you get different top results. Which of the following is a possible reason for this? You have spent more time online on sites supporting one side of the issue and your friend has spent more time on sites supporting another side. The search engine is giving higher rank based on assumptions and stereotypes about each of you, not to the most fair or factual information. Search engine algorithms are designed to make search results partly random so more websites get traffic, not just a few. The search engine's data shows you are smarter than your friend and can understand more complex writers and websites.

Yes yes no no

When searching for sources for a paper, your first search finds a large number of results; however, they don't seem to be very closely related to your topic. According to Chapter 1, which of these next steps should help you get better results? Decide which essential concepts make up your topic and search for them Search again with broader keywords that include your topic Change your topic so you can use the top items in your results Try multiple combinations of keywords and see which gives the best result

Yes no no yes

Which of the following statements about materials in the public domain is true? They are... any items without a copyright notice listed. available for reuse without citing. all the books available from public libraries. available for free use by anyone. protected by federal copyright laws

any items without a copyright notice listed.

This statement: "Bob Dylan's first album was released in 1962" is common knowledge. According to Chapter 5, why is this so? because I can find a webpage about it because I know it because common people believe it to be true because academics believe it to be true because it is a fact that can be verified

because it is a fact that can be verified

Donaldson, Bruce. Dutch: A Comprehensive Grammar. 3rd ed., Routledge, 2017. conference proceedings a book chapter a journal a book a journal article

book

Nussbaum, Martha C. "Legal Reasoning." The Cambridge Companion to the Philosophy of Law, edited by John Tasioulas, Cambridge University Press, 2020, pp. 59-77. conference proceedings a book chapter a journal a book a journal article

book chapter

Below, different Boolean operators (AND, OR, NOT) are listed alongside their function. Match each with the reason why it works Key (it finds only items without the unwanted keyword you specify) (it finds items that match at least one keyword) (it only finds items that include all keywords) NOT restricts your search results because: OR expands your search results because: AND narrows your search results because:

it finds only items without the unwanted keyword you specify it finds items that match at least one keyword it only finds items that include all keywords


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