English 383 Science Writing: Computer- Assisted Writing in the Natural and Social Sciences. |
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Evaluative Presentation English 383In groups of four members, review three print and three online science journals, assessing the similarities and differences/ advantages and disadvantages you discover in the two formats. Your task is to prepare a six minute formal presentation of your findings for our class. For each journal you review, describe the audience, technical level, and type of content. Show us comparative illustrations of format, layout and design. When possible review the same journal in both print and online formats. If you select a journal without a companion format, choose another journal as closely matched as possible in the other format. For each of the pairs, rate the journals on
Your presentations will be evaluated on the quality of delivery, use of complementary visual aids and handouts, and content. This assignment is designed to offer us an overview of the differences between print and online presentation of scientific information. Evaluation Criteria Activity The purpose of this assignment is to learn how to evaluate online information and webpages using these criteria: authority, accuracy, objectivity, coverage, and design.
http://www.science.widener.edu/~withers/webeval.htm The internet provides
users a wide range of information; scholarly documents posted next
to dubious ones; advertisements mixed with critical articles. Because
the information is largely unfiltered, evaluation sites recommend
caution. Caveat lector- Let the reader beware. While it is true that
some evaluation services are available and some internet review criteria
parallel those used for print resources, it is also true that additional
criteria need to be identifed and defined to use reviewing internet
sources.
Note: As information
published online can seem to be anonymous, establishing authorship
and authority become crucial to establishing credibility of source
material. The server replaces the publishing body of the print world
without guaranteeing the peer review process print media undergoes.
Therefore, search for the name of an organization, a watermark or
a link to that information. You are trying to determine whether the
information resides on a personal or an official Web site, first,
and then to evaluate the official site and the authors purpose and
credentials.
Note: Remember how easily anyone can publish
on the internet. At present, most websites exist without standards
to ensure accuracy.
Note: Because information is rarely neutral,
because controversial questions are often so interesting, because
publishing is so easy online, be careful to check objectivity. Do
you want to use research residing on a page sponsored by an advocacy
group for an informational paper on abortion?
Note: Because webpages are constantly
changing, dates become especially important. Remember,
Note: Appropriateness becomes an important issue when we consider access to minors. Depth is always critical to research.
Note: Web page design, like internet publishing,
is an individualized, unmonitored process. It becomes important,
then, to determine whether a page is arranged effectively to enable
efficient use. Attributions: Although many resources exist online,
the following three by Jane Alexander and Marsha Tate, Susan Beck,
and Elizabeth Kirk are exceptionally helpful. Visit them for in-depth
evaluation guides; this teaching exercise is a compilation of portions
of their web site evaluation articles residing at:
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