Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Lesson 1b - World Book Public Library Edition

1. The bright colors, large icons, and pictures on the World Book Online Kids (K-5) home page instantly caught my attention.  Any youngster would be immediately drawn in.  When I misspelled the word giraffe it recognized what I was looking for and brought me to the correct link anyway.  This would be very helpful for children (and someone who did not win the 3rd grade spelling bee – me!).

GiraffeThe information consisted of approximately one page of larger print at an elementary reading level and several pictures and videos.  The videos were very brief but informative, included sound, and were easy to access.  Although there was plenty of useful information, (did you know a giraffes tongue can be as long as 21 inches) there was only one short line about the giraffe's habitat "Giraffes live in Africa south of a large desert called the Sahara".  There was however, a little trivia question and link to more information about the Sahara off to the left side with more information.


2.  Once again I was intrigued by the bright and eye catching colors on the home page of the World Book Online Info Finder (5-9).   It was filled with many more options than the site for the younger children.  For some, it may have been a little too congested, but none the less it was very easy to navigate and full of the helpful information.  Once I typed in giraffe, (with the correct spelling this time) I was given several choices for finding information from encyclopedia articles, maps, back in time articles, dictionary entries, pictures, videos, tables, and special reports.  Choosing the first item on the encyclopedia articles page brought me to a similar version of the younger site only with much more information.  The page used much smaller text that would have covered about 2-3 pages and included the same pictures and videos from the previous site along with a map.  The information given went into much more detail and included a short outline of the article for quick reference.

3.  Even though the home page of The World Book Online Reference Center was not as eye catching as the others, it was clean and orderly with several options and links.  I chose to search for Bolivia, just because it sounded exotic and fun and because I still remember a little bit of Spanish from high school and college.  “Hola Senorita! Como te yamas?” 
Indigenous women in La Paz market

Three columns appeared on the screen.  The column on the left was a quick reference to the two columns on the right and more.  It included the links to Encyclopedia Articles, US Presidential Papers, Maps, Tables, Dictionaries, Sound, Historical Maps, Pictures, Back in Time Articles, Special Reports, Web Sites and Research Guides.
When I clicked on the first encyclopedia article with the map and the word Bolivia, I was taken to an article that was about 8 pages long with several pictures, a sound bite, a map, and a table of brief information about Bolivia.  On the left, there was on outline of the article with links for quicker reference to the main topics.  On the right hand side near the top were links to related Encyclopedia Articles, Books to Read, Back in Time Articles, Web Sites, Magazine Articles, and an Interactive Map for Bolivia.
Bolivia

The quick links to other information was what I thought would be most valuable to my patrons.   The other thing that caught my attention was the tools at the top of the articles.  Later when I went back, I realized that they were also available on the World Book Online Kids (K-5), and the World Book Online Info Finder (5-9).  The cleverest of these tools included hearing the text aloud, translating the text (into 30 or more languages), being able to save to my research, and the definition finder for unknown words.  These would be very useful tools and very fun to use when exploring far-away exotic lands such at Bolivia!



Lake Titicaca

1 comment:

  1. You made a lot of great discoveries, Mighty Mel! A gold star for noticing that the tools are the same for all modules and for finding the trivia question in Kids. I hope you'll take a minute to look at Kids' special features, such as "World of Animals," "Maps," and "Games." Thanks for your comments.

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