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Media Literacy

Media Literacy . WEBSITES AND SEARCH ENGINES. Don’t Believe Everything You Read!. Not all websites are good. Some have a ton of pop-ups and scams promising you money. Some are sites that look good but can infect your computer with a virus when you click on the link.

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Media Literacy

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  1. Media Literacy WEBSITES AND SEARCH ENGINES

  2. Don’t Believe Everything You Read! Not all websites are good. Some have a ton of pop-ups and scams promising you money...

  3. Some are sites that look good but can infect your computer with a virus when you click on the link...

  4. ...and some sites are complete hoaxes.

  5. So which sites are good? Any website including or ending with “ .gov” . or “.ca”. The “gov” means it is a government site and the “ca” means it is a Canadian, government or government-sponsored site. Examples include: The official Government of Canada website: http://www.gc.ca/ The official Province of Manitoba website: http://www.gov.mb.ca/ The Addictions Foundation of Manitoba: http://www.afm.mb.ca/ The official United States of America website: http://www.usa.gov/

  6. Any website including or ending with “.edu”. This means it is an educational institution such as a university, generally in the United States. Example: University of Illinois: http://illinois.edu/ *Note: Canadian University websites end in “.ca”: University of Winnipeg: http://www.uwinnipeg.ca/ University of Manitoba: http://umanitoba.ca/

  7. Websites including or ending with “.org”. This means it is an organization of some kind. Examples include: Turtle Island Native Network: http://www.turtleisland.org/front/_front.htm Seven Oaks School Division: www.7oaks.org/ *Note: Some organization websites are good; some are not. You must decide, based on how consistent the information is, whether it looks official or has many pop-ups, etc. Wikipedia, the infamous “anyone can edit” dictionary, is an organization: http://www.wikipedia.org/

  8. Can I use Wikipedia? • As a starting point / background information ONLY. • Never use Wikipedia as a cited source • Scroll down to check their sources and external links http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capitalism

  9. Beware of: Any website including or ending with “.com” indicates that it is a commercial website. Some might still be good, but many are useless.You must make that judgement call. Examples are: • Youtube: www.youtube.com • Hotmail: www.hotmail.com • Facebook: www.facebook.com • Amazon: http://amazon.com/

  10. BUT... Some “reliable” websites are not actually reliable! http://pubweb.acns.nwu.edu/~abutz/index.html

  11. So How Can I Tell? Pay attention to details!

  12. Find out who owns / published the site: Internic.ca or Whois.Net

  13. Still Not Sure? Cross-Reference! The more sources the better!

  14. So how do I use search engines? • Put search terms in quotation marks and use the + sign. “Garden City Collegiate” Capitalism + Canada + recent • Google Scholar can also be good

  15. Bibliography • Once you have found good websites, don’t forget a Bibliography! www.easybib.com www.bibme.com

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