The answer to the question, "How do you do research?" is a fairly simple one: I look it up online. If there is anything that I need to cite for a paper, I check all of the usual online resources before I do anything else. I type whatever it is I'm looking for into Yahoo! and click on the first link. That's where it starts. Of course, some courses require that I use actual real books or journal articles for papers, so I look them up on the library computer and go from there. Technology is really essential in how I do research for every topic.
I definitely see myself fitting into the statistics presented in the PowerPoint. For one, I certainly turn to the Internet before I turn to another person or to a book if I'm doing research (unless I am close friends with an expert or own a book on the topic already). I even use the Internet to find books on the topic I'm researching, so in a way I use the Internet to research the books I use to research. I, however, know how to research, so navigating the web is not as difficult for me as it may be for some students. For example, if I print something out, I read through it and find its main points before I decide if it's relevant to my topic and whether or not it's worth using. I have also never plagiarized from a web source.
I felt that the Electronic Constructivism article would have been more helpful for me if I wasn't a "digital native." I already know how to use technology in a classroom because I know how to use technology. I grew up with computers and cell phones and the like, and now technology is so ingrained in me that I wouldn't know how to approach teaching without some form of modern technology. I thought that the examples that the article gave were helpful but far too course specific. For example, my students will probably never write a paper on George Washington in my class, let alone one that compares him to George W. Bush (whose name, by the time I'm teaching, will be more likely to garner blank stares than knowing looks).
Students need to be taught researching skills. They need to be shown how to document information that they collect so they can go back and decide what is useful and what is not and will still know what source and which page it came from.
I participate in Web 2.0 to some extent. I have done podcasts for college classes and have blogged in the past (prior to this class), but I am most guilty of social networking, particularly on Facebook. Since most of the students in this class have to write a blog, I'd say that a lot of people nowadays, or at least a lot of "digital natives" participate in Web 2.0.
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