Education 2.0 & 3.0
148.6K views | +4 today
Follow
Education 2.0 & 3.0
All about learning and technology
Curated by Yashy Tohsaku
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Rescooped by Yashy Tohsaku from Information and digital literacy in education via the digital path
Scoop.it!

Escaping Google's stranglehold

Escaping Google's stranglehold | Education 2.0 & 3.0 | Scoop.it

Jamie McKenzie writes: "It is essential that schools teach students how to escape this stranglehold that Google creates. While helping visitors to find the information they need, Google effectively limits and narrows their searches - steering them toward the obvious and the conventional."


Via Mary Reilley Clark, Elizabeth E Charles
Mary Reilley Clark's curator insight, March 4, 2019 4:25 PM

This would be an excellent introduction to using keywords when researching. Have students read a short biography, then have them choose three or four words from the biography to add to their search. In Jamie's example, [Isadora Duncan AND critics] led to information that probably wouldn't show up on Biography.com! When I tried [George Washington AND critics], I also found richer resources.

 

The key to this is that students would need some basic knowledge in order to determine which keywords to use! Likewise, Jamie's "questions of import" are great, but I know if I asked students to use them, the first thing they would do is Google the exact question, then complain that nothing came up:) 

 

I'd love to do this as a stand alone library lesson: a short introduction, then time to read a short online biography, choose the keywords to add, and discuss their findings. It certainly would help students become more thoughtful about their research!

Scooped by Yashy Tohsaku
Scoop.it!

uClassify | About

uClassify | About | Education 2.0 & 3.0 | Scoop.it
Welcome to uClassify.com! We want to share classifier technology with everyone. We recognized that classifiers are mostly present at universities research departments and expensive commercial companies. We want to change that. We want everyone to have the possibility to use a top notch classifier - completely free. We find it enormously exciting to see what happens when a tool for creativity is given to the community. We hope to see all kinds of beyond-our-imagination classifiers and incredible web applications being built around the API.
Rescooped by Yashy Tohsaku from Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Scoop.it!

How Many Keywords Can A Single Page Rank For? - Neil Patel

How Many Keywords Can A Single Page Rank For? - Neil Patel | Education 2.0 & 3.0 | Scoop.it

How many keywords do you think you can put on a single page? The answer is hundreds if not thousands. But you are not going to be writing or creating pages based on 100 keywords. Instead, you are going to be creating pages around a group of terms or a topic. 


Via Jeff Domansky
Jeff Domansky's curator insight, August 19, 2017 6:40 PM

 Neil Patel's advice is to write for 3 to 4 key keywords and then you'll find a 2000 word article on the topic, if well-written, will also rank for other longtail keywords.