Set-up an account in LearningExpress and browse through the available exams.
This was very easy to do. I liked how easy this was to set-up. I wondered if you could set this up for a whole class without using e-mail addresses, but I could not find any way to do that. I know the teachers would find this very valuable if all could login to one site and the results could be there for them to view.
Choose one and answer a few questions. Then click “Score my test” in the top toolbar. Ignore the warnings and continue to have your test scored, so that you can see how the diagnostic page looks. Then click “View Answers” at the bottom of the page. What did you think about this test experience?
I chose both the math and reading tests for 4th grade. First I chose 4th Grade Math Practice: Geometry. I answered the first 5 questions and had my test scored. I really liked the fact that you can see what you did wrong on each question that was wrong in the View My Answers section. I think both kids and adults preparing for a test would also find this very valuable. I am thinking about having my son try these tests to prepare for his NWEA testing. This is a good way to show the kids how to test on a computer in addition to building their test taking skills and knowledge. The second choice was the California 4th Grade Reading Test. This was very good also. I managed to finish this test just because I wanted to see what would happen at the end of a test. It simply says you are finished and it gives you a score. Then you can also view your answers to see which ones were wrong and why they were considered wrong answers.
Job searching and resume writing are among the self-paced courses in LearningExpress. Click on the “Job Search and Workplace Skills” learning center and add one of the courses to your center. Take a few minutes to explore the course and note your observations.
I spent a lot of time on this part because I was really curious how this worked. I chose the Creating a Great Resume. It had two segments. Segment 1 fully explained each section of the resume and why it is important to employers. It explained the three types of resumes you can make and then it helped you choose the best one for you. Segment 2 helped you create a resume. This is such a great tool for high school and college students who don’t have a lot of money and are not really sure how to sell their skills to an employer. This walks you through resume creating and then gives you a copy of your resume in text format so you can insert it into a word-processing document that you like to use. It takes all the hard work out of the resume writing.
Type a search term in the search box in the upper left of the home page for a skills improvement or career topic in which you are interested. Notice that results are sorted by tests, courses and eBooks (if all of those are available for your chosen topic). Please select an eBook and look through its pages.
I looked up teaching and found a great ebook that helps parents learn about homeschooling. It had three parts; an overview explaining homeschooling, a language arts section that helps parents know what to expect from their middle school children as they teach them about language arts. It gives reading work for the students to work on and even gives an answer key in the appendix. The third section was mathematics. This section just like language arts talked about mathematic expectations of a middle school child and gave problems and answers for the parent to use with their child. Then there is a huge section of appendixes. The first two deal with language arts, an answer key and a glossary. The next two deal with math, an answer key and glossary are also found here. The next two are resources for both parents and students. The student resources are books to read in all subjects, periodicals that are interesting for kids, movies, computer software, audio resources, and internet websites. The parent resources include books and magazines that support homeschooling, websites for support and reading lists that are middle school appropriate. The last section is Homeschooling Parent Associations. It gives addresses and website for organizations that parents can contact for help. All in all this resource is very valuable for any parent wishing to begin homeschooling their middle school child.
Thursday, November 29, 2012
Week 8-Ancestry Library
Ancestry Library
Contrary to
popular belief, you don’t have to be dead to be listed in Ancestry Library and
can frequently find useful information in the U.S. Phone and Address
Directories, 1993-2002. You may even find your marriage license. Search for
your own name in Ancestry Library and report the results.
After spending time figuring out how to get access to this, I finally broke down and requested a free trial. I had no problem
finding my name when I searched using my maiden name. I was able to see my
maiden name results and my marriage license with my married name. When I
searched using just my married name I did not find myself at all. I was able to
search for my husband’s name and found him no problem. I was only able to find
public records for my husband, but I was able to see our Nevada marriage
license and public records for myself. We are unlisted in the phone book. I
wonder how much that has to do with it.
In Ancestry
Library, search for a grandparent or great-grandparent and see if you can
locate them in the census. Report
your findings.
I searched for my
great-grandmother, Bertha Trebilcock, and was able to find all of her records
from the 1930 and 1940 census list. It showed info about my great-grandfather
(with a clickable link to his info) and info about her son (also with a
clickable link to his info). It was really neat to see that information because
it is such a “snapshot” in time. It even knew that her birth date was somewhere
around 1896, though it did not have her actual certificate information. I did
not know this but her son’s birth name was actually Clifford, not Edward (as we
all knew him).
In Ancestry Library, perform a search under the “Photos and Maps” tab
for “Maine” as the keyword. Report
your findings. This was hard to find and I actually called ancestry.com to
find out how to find it. Once I found the right place to be, I found that there
was a lot of information to look through. Under the Collections tab there were
Maine census and voter lists, Maine birth, death and marriage info, Maine
military lists, a Maine immigration and travel section, Maine newspaper and
publications, Maine reference, dictionary and atlas info, Maine maps, atlases
and gazetteers, Maine stories, memories and history, Maine schools, directories
and church histories, Maine tax, criminal, land and wills. Under the History
tab, there were clickable links to the history of Maine, featured Maine data
collections, and famous Maine people who had signed their census form. There is
also a Help and Advice section that gives you information about Maine towns and
counties, family history research, research in New England town, and a link to
the Maine Geological Society. The final tab to click on in this section was
Resources. This section offered other ways to search for information.
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Lets Get Healthy
Health Source: Consumer Edition:
There were a lot of choices of journals, magazines,
scholarly journals, etc on the Health Source: Consumer Edition section of
Marvel. I searched for Rheumatoid Arthritis and got a lot of results. I read 2
different types of articles from the most recent offerings (2012 and 2010). One
was from a magazine, Natural Health, and was an article about a woman’s success
with beating back the effects of rheumatoid arthritis. It was an inspirational
story about how she fought through the pain and managed to push her RA into
remission. She did this by working out five days a week with both cardio and
weights. She also changed the ways she ate by substituting fruits for greasy
potato chips. After reading this short, inspiring article I thought maybe the
more scientific articles may be harder to read. I picked an article from AHFS
Consumer Medical Information about a medicine I have taken before. After
reading this article, which was consumer friendly, I am glad that I stopped
taking it! The article was very easy to understand and I will be passing it on
to another colleague that I know takes this medicine. Great resource!
Medline Plus:
1. I could not find Medline Plus on Marvel so I Google
searched it and found it on the NIH website. Medline was the only reference on
Marvel.
2. When I finally found the page I found that the main page
has a lot of info at your fingertips. There were some great articles referenced
on the News column on the right side. There were articles about the possibility
that people may not need to fast before a cholesterol test, there are gene
differences with people who have lung cancer and smoked and those that did not
smoke. There was also an article about how spinal steroid shots may not help
people who have sciatica. If you were interested you could dig deeper into the
news and click on the link that gives you more health news. They also have a
section called Top Searches that offers a Wordle application to point out the
most searched topics. The bigger the word the more times it has been searched.
Asthma, Diabetes, Vitamin D and Hypertension were the most searched so far
today.
3. After clicking on Drugs and Supplements, I looked up
Levothyroxin. Levothyroxin is the medicine I have to take for my thyroid
deficiency. There was a lot of information about this medication. It offered
information on when to take this medication, what it is prescribed for, any
interactions with other medications, what to do if you forget your medication,
and any special diet information you may need to know. I searched for an herbal
supplement after and found the same information choices as the prescribed
medication.
4. When I searched for rheumatoid arthritis there were a lot
more research offerings on Medline Plus than in Health Source: Consumer
Edition. They give you a general overview of the disease and then they offer a
starting point for your research. Scrolling down the page the topic is divided
into many categories for deeper researching. The information seems to come more
from organizations and colleges than from periodicals on Medline Plus. The
information is more medically written than the Health Source edition and seems
to be harder to understand than Health Source. However all results are full
text because it links you directly to the website were the information came
from.
5. When you click on videos you get a choice of Anatomy videos, Surgery videos and Interactive Tutorials. I looked at a video on rheumatoid arthritis through the interactive tutorials link. It was very
good. It would be a great tool for doctors to use with their patients to help
explain their disease or medical procedure they have or are going to have. It
reads the slides to the user and shows great pictures to along with the
descriptive text. When you choose a video to watch you have your choice of
Interactive Tutorial (you can control), Self Playing Tutorial (runs by itself)
or Text Summary (pdf version of the information).
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
Business Resources
Business Source Complete
1. Do a search for available information on FM radio. Pay
attention to the types of sources found.
After doing this search on FM radio I found that there were
a couple of academic journals and lots of periodical choices.
2. Look for the visual search option and try it. Does it
make searching easier or harder? When I did the visual search it loaded in
the Column Display Style, which I found very hard to navigate. I changed it to
the Block Display Style and found it much more visually pleasing. I actually
liked the Visual search much more than the list search I started with. It was
easier to see because it put the title and date in block style for you. I
thought it did not give an abstract, but when you clicked on the title, the abstract
loads on the right. That is very helpful when you are researching because you
can preview what its about first then you can decide if it is generally what
you are looking for.
EconLit
1. Complete a search to find resources for small business
owners.
I did this and I used the visual search, which was much
easier to see the results graphically. This topic is very Greek to me so the
results did not make a whole lot of sense, but I could see where
business-minded people would use this search to find pertinent information for
their own businesses.
2. Complete a search for items that pertain to the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and small businesses. This only gave
me 1 result and I am not certain how helpful it is for that particular topic.
3. Complete a search for items that pertain to tax policy
and small businesses. There were a few results to look through on this
topic. Again I found the visual search the best way to search. I grouped the
results by publication, which allowed me to see where the information was
coming from.
Regional Business News
1. Pick a nationally known company. Search under the
company’s name and look at the results. I looked up Walmart. I got almost
9,000 results from news and periodical sources.
2. Narrow the regional search to something more
appropriate for this area of the country. I added New England in the search
box, had it search all terms and got results from Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
Oregon, Maryland, etc. It searched for New and England and returned results that
were from the New York Times.
3. Choose a Maine company to see what information is
available about either the company or its industry. I searched BIW and
returned 68 results. The results were from news, government documents, and
periodicals. There were many articles updating the reader on things that were
happening at BIW, and the governmental connections and opportunities with their
business.
Value Line
1. Look at the current issue of Value Line. Explore the
various links for the “Investment Survey,” which is the primary tool available
to public library users. Start with “Description,” which gives a good
description of the site. This provides a great description of what Value
Line can do for the consumer. It also gives a general overview of the stock
reports they provide.
2. Look at the various reports offered: Ratings and
Reports, Selection and Opinion, Summary and Index, etc. Familiarize yourself
with the information contained in each report and how they differ.
The Ratings and Reports section gives information about 133
different companies. It offers the company’s name, the ticker for the company,
the industry it belongs to, and the timeliness for each company. You can view
these reports in either PDF or HTML version. The Selection and Opinion report
is a PDF of the updates that have occurred during the week in the stock world.
It gives you low risk options and advice on what stocks are worth purchasing
and the overall ups and downs in the stock market. The Summary and Index report
is a 40 page PDF that is an overall index to current stocks and their ratings,
the timeliness ranks of each company, timely stocks, conservative stocks,
stocks that are ranked 2, highest yielding stocks, biggest free flow cash
generators, the widest discount from book value, etc for individual companies.
The Standard Ratings and Report Cover Page is a 2 page index of where to find
info on specific companies and it gives the National Income Series information
for consumers. The Standard Ratings and Report Supplementary section
supplements more detailed information about specific larger companies.
3. Pick a well-known stock such as Starbucks, General
Motors, Apple, etc., and do a company search using either the general search
box at the top of the page or “company look up.” Familiarize yourself with the
type of information provided by linking to the various tabs at the top of the
report. Also look to see if there is a “full research report” available for the
company.
I chose Apple, which I found out in the stock world is called
AAPL, and it had a full research report which was a one page PDF of detailed
Apple stock and company information. The tabs were also very detailed. The
Quotes tab revealed the current placement of Apple stock in the stock market.
It gives prices and information stock buyers are in need of. The News tab gives
the most recent business news about the company from many different business
sources. The Option tab gives the most recent price for stocks to bid on or ask
and when these prices will expire. The Graph tab, which was foreign to me,
seemed to show the stock progress throughout the day. The Time/Sales tab shows
1 minute of bids and asking prices and the market it happened in.
WallStreet Journal
1. Using the advance search feature, look for articles on
small business and health care. There were almost 20,000 results.
2. Look at how the results are returned and the suggested
limiters offered by the site. What might a small business person be interested
in? A small business person looking for health care information might limit
their search by looking up small business and health care expenditures so they
will understand the costs for providing this type of care. They also might
limit it by looking up small business and health care policy so they can find
out about health care policies that small business might adopt. Anther limit
could be small business and health insurance so they can get an idea of what
kinds of insurance small business offer their employees. A fourth limiter could
be small business and health care to get a general overview of having insurance
in a small business.
3. Familiarize yourself with the options available
to follow up on your search, such as creating alerts. Yeah, creating an
alert worked for me! It was easy to use and sends the information directly to
my e-mail as it becomes available. I was able to name the alert whatever I
wanted and could schedule it daily, weekly, monthly or yearly. Another option
was RSS feed, which created a web address that I could visit to see new articles
about my topic. Other options are to save my research on the ProQuest website,
e-mail the research list to myself or someone else, print it, get the citing
information or export/save it in another form (PDF, HTML, RTF, etc) to view it
later.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)