Tuesday 23 November 2010

YouTube

It may not be too surprising to learn that the ever growing GOOGLE empire also acquired YouTube; For all the nonsense on YouTube, there are also some exceptionally good educational materials.

And with today's webcams and digital technology, you have some options in how you can make good use of YouTube and other such sites:

1) Rather than keep a Blog, you could keep a VLOG (Video-Log) as a study-research diary. This would help improve your oral fluency and act as a useful check mechanism to see if you really understand what you're studying or researching.
2) Video presentations can be uploaded into YouTube.
3) Video presentations and Video CVs are becoming more common. They can be stored on YouTube (or elsewhere) and linked from your website or Blog.

One warning about YouTube: It does periodically get closed down in some parts of the world (rather pointlessly since it is always possible to access it through  a proxy server).

Monday 22 November 2010

Surveys, Forms and Questionnaires

One other point about GOOGLE Docs: You can custom design online forms and surveys - a resource that you might find rather useful in some types of research.

Sunday 21 November 2010

GOOGLE Documents

Although Blogger and GOOGLE sites offer only limited storage space, this is not really a problem, because you can create and store presentations, documents, and charts in GOOGLE documents, and create links to them.

GOOGLE Docs is simply Google's answer to MS Office. It's not as sophisticated, but it's flexible, and its online storage mechanism means you can access your documents anywhere you go, not to mention share them with as many or as few people as you choose.

Some people make back-ups of their Office documents in GOOGLE docs to guard against theft, loss, and failure of their computers and storage devices.

GOOGLE Docs also has a wealth of templates, e.g. for reports, cvs etc.

Saturday 20 November 2010

GOOGLE Sites

If you would prefer to establish a more traditional fixed website at speed, setting up a GOOGLE site takes approximately 5 minutes; again, thinking ahead, cvs, presentations, academic work, video and much more might be organised into a highly professional looking website calculated to impress future employers, and promote your research activity.

Friday 19 November 2010

Blogger

Blogger as you will have realised is the home of this site; it's another GOOGLE-owned operation, and again simple enough to use. A Blog functions as a diary / interactive web-environment, and can be public (like this Blog), or kept private for personal use.

Four reasons to consider keeping a Blog.
i) A great medium to keep a research and study diary.
ii) A simple way of improving your writing fluency.
iii) A possible medium for gathering and presenting your work to a public audience.
iv) A possible medium for organising a portfolio of your achievements for future employers.

Thursday 18 November 2010

Picasa

Picasa is GOOGLE's photo storage site, and the equivalent on GOOGLE to FLICKR. It's a useful site to store and categorise your personal photos.

What has this got to do with postgraduate English you may ask?! Not a lot, possibly; but images you may use in your research work may find a place here (and a unique URL you can use);  and one day you might find that a professional / research album of some type may come in very handy in research work (e.g. presentations) and when applying for employment.

As we'll discuss later, traditional methods of applying for jobs through old-style cvs are very much being overtaken by technological developments.

Wednesday 17 November 2010

I-GOOGLE

I-GOOGLE enables you to create your own private homepage. Again it is very user-friendly, and enables you to collect the feeds, web-links and gadgets that you find most useful in your day-to-day work in one place.

Tuesday 16 November 2010

GOOGLE Reader

Have a play around with GOOGLE Reader (under the 'more' button); it enables you to store and share websites and RSS feeds that you find particularly useful.

Monday 15 November 2010

Blog Searches

One further search facility GOOGLE has is a BLOG search (Blogger, one of the most popular Blogs on the Internet is Google-owned). Many people use Blogs and for all kinds of reasons, some of them very specialised and research-orientated. It's worth therefore doing a BLOG search using some key search terms; you might just find some material that will be both useful and interesting to you.

Sunday 14 November 2010

Video and Image Searches

Probably everyone is familiar with GOOGLE video and image search; two things worth noting however:
1) There is no reason as such why you can't use these sources in research.
2) Material is often copyrighted, and if you use it, you must reference it.

Check out the APA website to check on referencing conventions.

Saturday 13 November 2010

Wonderwheel

An alternative option to Timeline you'll see is Wonderwheel, which provides a linked graphic of the main themes in the fiekl you are searching for.

Friday 12 November 2010

Timeline Search

On your left after a standard GOOGLE search, you'll notice some other options; one of these is timeline, which will give you a list of research results in chronological order to give you a kind of history of the topic you are interested in. Very good if you want to get an overview of developments in a particular field.

Thursday 11 November 2010

GOOGLE News

Google News in the top toolbar is at first sight a digest of just what you'd expect - the latest news. But it is also a search engine in its own right, which means you can use it to search for all the latest news in your subject field, as well as look back through the news archive. It's a good way of staying in touch with all the latest developments in your field.

Wednesday 10 November 2010

Create E-mail Alert

If you look at the GOOGLE Scholar toolbar, you'll see a 'create e-mail alert' button. This is quite neat. With GOOGLE Alert, you type in your search terms and then set GOOGLE to conduct a regular search for you (daily, weekly etc.). When GOOGLE finds a new hit for you, very simply you get an automatic e-mail from them. So, it's well worth deciding on key research words and phrases for your studies and setting up a GOOGLE Alert system for yourself.

Of course, you'll need a free g-mail account to take advantage of all of this - but on balance it's well worth having.

Tuesday 9 November 2010

GOOGLE Scholar

Google Scholar is an academic search engine. For example, if you are doing scholarly research into tourism, you probably don't want your search results to include bargain holiday offers from travel agencies and the like. GOOGLE Scholar is the answer; again, you'll find it under the 'more' button on the main page. 

Monday 8 November 2010

Google Books Search Types

Most search engines provide hits in order of 'popularity'; GOOGLE Books allows you to alter this, so that you can search. for example, 'architecture' as normal, but click in the left-hand options column to restrict the search to the most recent books publihsed, or books in the nineteenth century only; a pop-up calendar enables you to custom set the search for the exact dates you're interested in. You can see these options if you double click on the webshot in the last entry.

Sunday 7 November 2010

Google Books

Up on the top right hand side of the toolbar is a label with the title 'more'; This is not very informative, but click it, and you'll find a whole range of useful resources and specialist search engines. One of these is Google Books, which when you enter a search term provides you with a list of books on the subject or topic you have entered:

Saturday 6 November 2010

GOOGLE Advanced Search

It's easy to ignore GOOGLE's advanced search feature, as it's almost unnoticeable on the main search page, just to the right of the search box.  But in fact it's a very user-friendly search engine to refine your searches to track down what you're looking for with greater speed and efficiency.

Take a look, and see what you can find.

Friday 5 November 2010

Google Search Results

GOOGLE search results provide not only information about your research but a series of mini language lessons if you look at the results carefully. Take a look at the following search results, for example and see if you can identify useful words and phrases to follow up:

  • Mechanical Engineering  

     - [ Bu sayfanın çevirisini yap ]
    Freelance Writing Jobs | Today's Articles | Sign In ... Steel as an Engineering Material. The range of mechanical properties that can be created through ...
    www.suite101.com/mechanical-engineering - Önbellek

  • Mechanical Engineering Magazine - MEMagazine  

     - [ Bu sayfanın çevirisini yap ]
    ASME's flagship magazine for Mechanical Engineers. ... ADVERTISEMENT Measurement Computing · Mechanical Engineering Magazine - The Magazine of ASME ...
    memagazine.asme.org/ - Önbellek - Benzer

  • Mechanical Engineering - Articles from Mechanical Engineering ...  

     - [ Bu sayfanın çevirisini yap ]
    Mechanical Engineering - Find current articles and Mechanical Engineering archives for information or help with school homework.
    www.encyclopedia.com/Mechanical+Engineering/publications.aspx?... - Önbellek - Benzer

  • Mechanical Engineering articles | HighBeam Research - FREE trial  

     - [ Bu sayfanın çevirisini yap ]
    Mechanical Engineering: Find and search current online magazines and journal articles, issues, and archives from Mechanical Engineering for research and ...
    www.highbeam.com/Mechanical+Engineering/publications.aspx - Önbellek - Benzer

  • Index of mechanical engineering articles - Wikipedia, the free ...  

     - [ Bu sayfanın çevirisini yap ]
    This is an alphabetical list of articles pertaining specifically to mechanical engineering. For a broad overview of engineering, please see List of ...
    en.wikipedia.org/.../Index_of_mechanical_engineering_articles - Önbellek - Benzer

  • Mechanical engineering - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia  

     - [ Bu sayfanın çevirisini yap ]
    Main articles: Structural analysis and Failure analysis. Structural analysis ...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mechanical_engineering - Önbellek - Benzer

  • Mechanical Engineering Articles | Find Articles at BNET  

     - [ Bu sayfanın çevirisini yap ]
    A system to deliver local hypothermia could one day improve the lives of heart-attack patients. On July 18, 2006, engineer Dean Cowles. ...
    findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa5325/ - Önbellek - Benzer


  • Here are some ideas:

    What is a flagship magazine? What does flagship mean in this context?
    Articles pertaining to? What does pertaining mean?
    What adjective can be used before the word overview?
    What preposition can be used with the verb search? When do we use it? When do we not use it?

    Spend a few minutes longer with your search results, and you'll be surprised how many odd bits and pieces of language you may learn.

    Thursday 4 November 2010

    GOOGLE in English

    In this series of entries, we'll take a look at how you can make use of GOOGLE.

    The first piece of advice regarding GOOGLE is to use the English version of GOOGLE, very simply because it will provide you with a simple way of improving your English language comprehension skills.

    Wednesday 3 November 2010

    APA Style

    One site worth bookmarking and taking a good look through is the main APA web-page at: http://www.apastyle.org/

    This site will provide you with help about any referencing and formatting questions you may have,

    Tuesday 2 November 2010

    University of Richmond Writer's Web

    We've just come across another very useful site for academic writers - very clearly organised and helpful. It's from the University of Richmond in the USA, and well worth exploring. Check it out here.

    Monday 1 November 2010

    What can be used as sources in academic work?

    If you study bibliographies, you may be surprised by the number of different sources that can be used in academic work (each of which has a referencing convention).

    Books, articles and Internet sites are obvious of course, but you don't necessarily need to get stuck on these:

    There are newspapers and magazines; films, television, video and radio; and lectures and speeches; and personal communications both orally and in writing, and more beyond. Depending on your subject area, there may be many more sources available than you think.