ED 262 Research, Reference & Resource Skills
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ED 262 Research, Reference & Resource Skills
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Rescooped by Dennis Swender from Information and digital literacy in education via the digital path
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Ten Search Strategies Students Need to Know | Free Technology for Teachers

Ten Search Strategies Students Need to Know | Free Technology for Teachers | ED 262 Research, Reference & Resource Skills | Scoop.it

Last week I hosted a Practical Ed Tech webinar titled Ten Search Strategies Students Need to Know. Afterwards I had many requests for accessing the recording of the webinar. The webinar is now available on demand. If you missed it, the webinar is available as an on-demand webinar right here on Practical Ed Tech.


Via Elizabeth E Charles
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Rescooped by Dennis Swender from Teach and tech
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Awesome Visual Featuring 13 Important Google Search Tips for Students ~ Educational Technology and Mobile Learning

Awesome Visual Featuring 13 Important Google Search Tips for Students ~ Educational Technology and Mobile Learning | ED 262 Research, Reference & Resource Skills | Scoop.it

Via Luísa Lima
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Rescooped by Dennis Swender from iPads, MakerEd and More in Education
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"Talk to Books" at TED 2018: Ray Kurzweil unveils Google's astounding new search tool will answer any question by reading thousands of books —

"Talk to Books" at TED 2018: Ray Kurzweil unveils Google's astounding new search tool will answer any question by reading thousands of books — | ED 262 Research, Reference & Resource Skills | Scoop.it
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Imagine if you could gather thousands of writers in a circle to discuss one question. What would optimist Thomas L. Friedman say about intervening in Syria, for example? Would chaos theorist Santo Banerjee concur?

Google now has a way to convene that kind of forum—in half a second. Speaking to TED curator Chris Anderson yesterday (April 13), legendary futurist Ray Kurzweil introduced “Talk to Books” a new way to find answers on the internet that should bring pleasure to researchers, bookworms and anyone seeking to expand their thinking on a range of topics.

Type a question into “Talk to Books,” and AI-powered tool will scan every sentence in 100,000 volumes in Google Books and generate a list of likely responses with the pertinent passage bolded.

Via John Evans
stephanie vanderlaan's curator insight, April 16, 2018 1:59 PM
Sounds interesting....