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Beyond the Internet offers a philosophy of research that illustrates the benefits of broadening one’s approach. The message for researchers, librarians, teachers, parents, and students is simple: The Internet is not a complete reference source and is often inaccurate. The issue is not what you cannot find on the Internet, but what you miss if you only consult the Internet. To fully investigate a subject, you need also to consult a wide range of traditional resources that have not been digitized, including documents and correspondence, government records, and holdings in private collections. Besides these sources, researchers should appreciate the benefits of interviews and on-site visits. These sources provide the threads that links our past to our present.
The book also emphasizes the difference between acquiring facts that answer a specific question and the process of analytical thinking that goes into assessing a subject. Serendipitous finds and new interpretations based on previously unknown sources require research in original materials. The author uses challenges culled from her own work in American history and as a reference book editor to illustrate the different resources described. These anecdotes lend a personal element to the highly practical advice contained in the chapters. Each chapter describes a specific resource, provides relevant case studies, and offers tips and techniques for using that resource.
This updated edition explores how the Internet has become an even more compromised tool in recent years by enabling artificial intelligence and social media to manipulate information. This book examines the need to pursue traditional research techniques and how to use them to validate information from the Internet. If you want to research such topics as the origins of terrorism, the complicated background to hostilities in the Middle East, the evolution of U.S. politics, or the decline in basic reading and math skills, you need to consult original materials. Students should learn what sources are available and how to use them so they can make informed decisions about everything from elections to foreign policy. Whatever your interests, you need to diversify your approach and go Beyond the Internet.
Published | Nov 30 2024 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 2nd |
Extent | 172 |
ISBN | 9798892050302 |
Imprint | Bernan Press |
Dimensions | 9 x 6 inches |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Previous edition praise: Chernow builds a philosophical argument for using library resources for research, rather than relying exclusively on the Internet. . . . This readable volume is much less a how-to guide for conducting effective research than a well-thought-out exploration of the philosophical problem of conducting research in the information age.
Choice Reviews
Previous edition praise: [A] critically important instructional reference book for aspiring authors, as well as anyone else engaged in a research project of any kind. . . . Thoroughly 'user friendly' itself, Beyond The Internet should be considered essential reading for all aspiring authors and is a core addition to any professional, academic, and community library research reference collection.
Midwest Book Review
Previous edition praise: What a delight young researchers are missing if they don’t take their fill from the granaries of libraries—books, manuscripts, journals, archives, collections, correspondence, photographs. By comparison, the Internet is as intellectually scant as People magazine. Read Beyond the Internet and learn how to make the knowledge of the Internet yours!
Charles J. Shields, Biographer
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