Seven Steps to Effective Research

 Step 1:
Identify Your Topic
  Step 2:
Find Background Material
 Step 3:
Find Books
 Step 4:
Find Magazine Articles
 Step 5:
Find Web Resources
 Step 6:
Evaluate your Materials
 Step 7:
Cite Your Information

Step 5: Find Web Resources

Finding Resources on the Internet (Using the World Wide Web)

Each site on the Web has an internet address, also known as a Uniform Resource Locator (URL). The url is inserted in the "Location" box in your browser. Once you identify a site you can use for your research it is important that you record the internet address if you wish to return to that site. With this address you can go directly back to the site with ease. You also need to record the url if you are preparing a works cited page, as this address is used as a part of the bibliographical citation (see Step 7) needed for your works cited page.

If you do not have a url for the page you want, you may perform a topic search using a search engine or a meta search engine. A search engine is a website which is devoted to findingweb pages of the particfular topic you are interested in. If you compare search engines you will find that they each have different features and methods of searching the Web. The one you choose to use is up to you. When using the Web for research it is recommended that you perform your search with more than one different search engine to get as many relevant sources as possible.

Tip: The "Help" button on most search engine sites will give you many pointers to efficiently search that particular site, or look at Search Engine Watch's Search Assistance Features page.

There are basic techniques for searching the Web using search engines. One way is to use the feature of typing in your keywords according to the recommended procedures for the search engine you are using and performing a search on those keywords using Boolean operators, such as "and" to connect keywords.

Another way involves beginning with the list of subjects in a directory. These lists are a more direct way of searching since indexers have already identified specific sites for the indicated subjects.

Tip: If your search topic consists of multiple words, for example juvenile delinquency, enclose the words in quotation marks when you type them into the search box. This instructs the computer to search them as a phrase rather than individual words.

EXAMPLE: "juvenile delinquency"

On to Step 6

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