I LOVE that idea Juliann, and I will steal it. :)I teach Boolean search terms in our middle school, and the kids pick it up quickly. It came in handy recently when students were researching the abolitionist John Brown, and authors named John Brown were among the many returns. One of my boys used "Not" John Brown (author), and it worked well for him. Most kids at this age (7th and 8th) stick to using one "and" in the advanced search, but some of the kids go beyond that.On Tue, Jan 31, 2023 at 9:51 AM Juliann T. Moskowitz <juliann14@hotmail.com> wrote:_______________________________________________I've taught Boolean searching from middle school up to university students. When I taught the concept to middle schoolers I had them stand up or sit down based on the boolean operator. Examples: everyone with jeans AND sneakers stand up. Everyone with jeans OR sneakers stand up, etc. I think the visual representation helped them to understand it a little better.
Juliann T. Moskowitz
Instruction and Information Literacy Librarian
Wahlstrom Library
University of Bridgeport
Bridgeport, CT 06604
From: CASL-L <casl-l-bounces@mylist.net> on behalf of Loretta Sullivan <b59lgian@mpspride.org>
Sent: Monday, January 30, 2023 12:19 PM
To: CASL_L <casl-l@mylist.net>
Subject: [CASL-L] Booleon search terms - do you teach them?Hello everyone,
I wanted to know if you teach Booleon search terms (and,or, not) for more effective searching when using keywords? Can someone clarify for me (I feel awful about not knowing) why when trying these search terms they do not always work? Are they only effective when using databases vs. using a search engine to look something up? My TIS and I were trying them in hopes of helping students learn these strategies, but did not find anything that worked the way we wanted when we tried them. Am I missing something? Thanks for your help!
Respectfully,
Loretta SullivanLibrary Media Specialist
Bennet AcademyManchester, CT
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