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A Dozen Ways to Web Surf Efficiently!
1) Use Google Alerts to save time with searches you do on a regular basis.
Step 1: Go to Google – www.google.com
Step 3: Click on “News Alerts” in the left hand column
Step 4: Click on “You can also sign in to manage your alerts”
Step 5: Either sign in with your ‘Google account” or click on “Create an account now.”
Step 6: If you created an account, accept the terms.
Step 7: Enter your search term, choose how often you want an alert and then click on “Create Alert.”
For example, create an alert for ‘math lesson plans’, or ‘response to intervention’, or ‘autism’, or ‘(your name).’ Now, every time someone posts something on the internet with that topic, Google will send an alert to your email box.
2) Put quotes around key words. For example, rather than search for math lesson plans, search for “math lesson plans” or math “lesson plan.”
3) Add extra phrases to your search in quotes that will help you to zero in on what you are looking for: “best practice,” “teaching math,” or “classroom behavior” autism.
4) Looking for people? Whether you are trying to reconnect with a former colleague or you’re looking for contact information for a specific “expert,” go to www.anywho.com to do your search.
6) You’ve created a PowerPoint lesson with beautiful graphics and you want to share it with a colleague, but when you try to send the file, it won’t go because it’s too big. You can send up to five large files a month, for free, at www.dropsend.com.
9) When you open an article online and want to find a specific word on that page, don’t waste precious time scrolling down to try to find it. In your browser, click on “Edit”. Then select “Find on this page” and click on that. Enter your “word” and search the article, etc. for what you are looking for. This step saves TONS of time.
10) Did you get an error message? Need to find a solution?
Step 1: Pull up Notepad or Wordpad
Step 2: Type the error message into the text editor.
Step 3: Copy what you typed into the text editor in to your search engine.
Step 4: Click “go”, “search” etc
Step 5: You should find links to blog entries or tech help websites that will offer help with solving your error message.
Step 6: OPTIONAL – SnagIt (www.snagit.com) can ‘copy’ those messages for you, verbatim, in text format!
11) Want news? Check out www.refdesk.com
12) This is my absolute favorite trick: Many websites don’t have a search box. How do you find the school calendar, for example, on a district website?
site:www.whatever__the_school_website_is.com
For example: calendar site:www.sau99.k12.nh.us
Step 2: Try searching “autism site:edu” without the quote marks. You’ll only get search returns from college and university sources using .edu domains. Other examples to try:
lesson plans site:www.ldonline.org
differentiated instruction site:www.aimhieducational.com co-teaching site:www.edublogs.org
Have fun with this. It saves a LOT of time looking for specific things on a website. And for a Baker’s Dozen, let’s go one step further…
13) If you want to search for a specific file type, for example, PowerPoint presentations on the topic of “exit cards”. In the Google Search Box, type:
“exit cards” filetype:ppt
Your search will only pull up PowerPoint presentations on the topic!
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