The document discusses how search engines like Google work and dispels some common myths. It explains that Google's algorithm considers over 200 unique signals from webpages and links to determine rankings, not popularity or payment. The document also notes that students often over-rely on Google for research and lack skills to use digital resources effectively for academic work.
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SLI_2017_How_Google_Works_Final.ppt
1. How Google Works:
Are Search Engines Really
Dumb and Should Educators
Even Care?
Paul Barron
pbbarron@gmail.com
paul@duckduckgo.com
All Right Reserved. This presentation may be copied and distributed for
nonprofit educational purposes only. 2017. Session revised 4-1-2017
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We know our students âŚ
For them, âto Googleâ is a lifestyle, a habit
pattern. Do you agree?
JEFF STAHLER: (c) Columbus Dispatch Dist.
by Newspaper Enterprise Association, Inc
âWhereas libraries once seemed
like the best answer to the
question, Where do I find� the
search engine now rules.â
âNo Brief Candle: Preconceiving Research
Libraries for the 21st Century;â Part II
Council of Library and Information Resources
http://www.clir.org/pubs/reports/pub142/pub142.pdf
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Research Sources for Middle & High School Students
1. Google or other online search engine (94%)
2. WikipediA or other online encyclopedia (75%)
3. YouTube or other social media sites (52%)
4. Their peers (42%)
8. Online databases (EBSCO, JSTOR,
or Grolier (17%)
9. Research librarian at school (16%)
âHow Teens Do Research in the Digital Worldâ
http://pewinternet.org/Reports/2012/Student-Research
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The Definition of âResearchâ
âMiddle and high school teachers suggest that the
definition of âresearchâ has changed in the digital
world, and that change is reflected in how students
approach the task.â
âWhen asked how middle and high
school students âdo research,â the first
response in every student and teacher
focus group was âGoogleâ.â
âSome teachers say, for students today, âresearch =
Googlingâ.â
âHow Teens Do Research in the Digital Worldâ
http://pewinternet.org/Reports/2012/Student-Research
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Love is blind!
âStudents perceive themselves
as skilled searchers of Google and
every other search tool (because theyâre
âexpertsâ at searching Google).
â[Educators] know that these perceptions arenât true.â
âUndergraduate students rated their information literacy
skills very high, but their search queries and behaviors did
not support this. They were not sophisticated users of
Google at all, let alone library resources.â
âWhat Do Librarians Do, Exactly?â
Helen Georgas
The Informed Librarian Online; http://goo.gl/gTIYFD
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Unfortunate Facts at UC Berkeley
âAt the undergraduate level, what is anecdotally apparent to
most faculty and librarians:
ďŽ Students lack skills needed to use digital resources for
research.
ďŽ As âdigital nativesâ they are adept at finding
information for personal purposes; but âŚ
ďŽ those skills often arenât sufficient to accomplish their
academic work effectively.â
âReport of the Commission on the Future of the UC Berkeley Library;â http://goo.gl/iKER2f
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UC Berkeley World Ranking
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https://www.timeshighereducation.com/world-university-rankings/2016/world-ranking#!/page/0/length/25
https://goo.gl/9ANmZY
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Furthermore
âStudents tended to overuse Google and misuse
scholarly databases. Indeed, theyâre
not even very good at using Google
for these purposes.â
âGoogleâs own research
scientists have lamented that
students are unable to take advantage of the resources
that are readily available to those who know how to find
them.â
We canât use this database;
it doesnât look like Google!
Report of the Commission on the Future of the UC Berkeley Library
http://goo.gl/iKER2f
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Daniel M. Russell, Googleâs âŚ
Senior Research Scientist for Search Quality says,
âIn universities a lot of the Google Generation do the
dumbest things you can possibly imagine.
Scholarly searching is not an intuitive skill;
students cannot learn well by imitating peers.â
âThat is where librarians come in;
⌠teach them what is possible.â
Searching For Better Research Habits
Steve Kolowich
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/09/29/search
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Do you agree thatâŚ
âThere are consequences to
our students and our educational
system if we [allow] a search
engine to define the parameters
of effective research.â
The University of Google: Education in the (Post) Information Age
Tara Brabazon
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If educators hope âŚ
ďŽ To change studentsâ excessive use of Google,
educators must embrace
Google and learn how
the search engine works, in order âŚ
ďŽ To influence students to integrate Google use with
other reliable sources of information.
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Presentation Objective
ďŽ Increase our
understanding of how
search engines and
Google work by dispelling
some search engine myths.
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Presentation Objective: Dispel âŚ
ďŽ Search engine myths:
ď¨ Google accepts pay for placement,
ď¨ understands a searcherâs query,
ď¨ treat all sites and domains the
same when determining results, and
ď¨ determine the results based on the popularity of the
site with searchers.
Iâm
.edu.
Iâm
.net.
But weâre
not equal.
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Why learn how Google works? Because âŚ
âWe expect a lot search engines. We ask them vague
questions about topics that we are unfamiliar and anticipate
a concise organized response.â
âYou would have better success if
you laid your head on the keyboard
and coaxed the computer to read your mind.â
Understanding Search Engines: Mathematical Modeling and Text Retrieval
Michael W. Berry and Murray Browne
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To understand how search engines work âŚ
âŚwe must understand, âsearch engines have no
understanding of words or
language. (They) don't
recognize user intent, can't
distinguish goal-oriented search
from browsing search.â
A ResourceShelf Interview: 20 Questions with Dr. Gary Flake, Ph.D.
Head of Yahoo Research Labs
http://searchenginewatch.com/showPage.html?page=3372051
Thursday, June 3, 2004
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And today âŚ
âGoogle announced
the biggest change since
2000. Google will focus on
trying to understand the meanings of phrases and
concepts as opposed to matching keywords in a search
query to the same words on Web pages.â
âGoogle Alters Search to Handle More Complex Queriesâ
New York Times; September 26, 2013
goo.gl/iuEtH8
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If Google doesnât understand my query âŚ
⌠how does Google
determine how to select and rank the
results in response to my query?
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Myth: Google Accepts âPay for Rankingâ
âAt Google we take our commitment to
delivering useful and impartial search results
very seriously.â
âWe donât ever accept payment
to add a site to our index, update it
more often, or improve its ranking.â
Matt Cutts
Head of Googleâs Web Spam Team
http://goo.gl/S40MJJ
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Google does accept payment for âŚ
âŚadvertising.
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What Google Considers on the Webpage
ďŽ Googleâs algorithms rely on more than 200 unique signals to
determine a ranking. For example,
ď¨ how often the search terms occur
on the webpage,
ď¨ if the search terms appear in the
title or the URL, and
ď¨ whether synonyms or the search
terms occur on the page.
Facts about Google and Competition
http://www.google.com/press/competition/howgooglesearchworks.html
An Update to our Search Algorithms (8/10/12)
http://insidesearch.blogspot.com/2012/08/an-update-to-our-search-algorithms.html
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What Google Considers Off the Webpage
ďŽ Links
ď¨PageRank â A measure of the
number and the quality of links
to a webpage.
ď¨Assumption - Important webpages receive
more links from other webpages.
Facts about Google and Competition
www.google.com/press/competition/howgooglesearchworks.html
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Matt Cutts of Google states,
âPopularity is different from accuracy and
PageRank is different than popularity.â
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rNsRpJm3z2g
Letâs test that assertion by searching for âŚ
Therefore, PageRank is different from accuracy.
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Search Results
The first 36
results are from
Jew Watch Com
which is the most
âpopular and
accurate resultâ for
our search.
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Jew Watch â A Popular & Accurate Site?
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This ad used to be at the âŚ
⌠bottom of the search results âŚ
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Google states, âWeâre disturbed about these
search results as well.â
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Googleâs Explanation
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http://www.google.com/explanation.html
This page has been deleted from the Google database. For a copy see:
http://archive.adl.org/internet/google_explanation.html
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The Value of Quality Links
âWith PageRank, five or six high-quality
links from websites would be valued much
more highly than twice
as many links from less
reputable or established sites.â
Librarian Central
How does Google collect and rank results?
http://www.google.com/librariancenter/articles/0512_01.html
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Checking the Links to JewWatch.com
Google will return
.edu sites that are
linked to
JewWatch.com.
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Law School Links to Jew Watch.com
Google evaluates not
only the number of
links but the quality
(reputation) of the
linking site.
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Please explain why Google does not consider âŚ
⌠the fact that
the site is
popular with
us, the
searchers who
view the sites!
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Why not consider searchersâ preferences?
"We believe the approach which relies heavily on an
individual's tastes and preferences [to rank results] just
doesn't produce the quality and relevant ranking that
our algorithms do."
Amit Singhal; Google Fellow
âThis is tough stuff;â 25 February 2010
http://googlepolicyeurope.blogspot.com/2010/02/this-stuff-is-tough.html
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Why!?!
First: âWe have all been trained to trust
Google and click on the first result.â
âCollege students trust Google; they
click on the number one abstract most
of the time, even when the abstracts are
less relevant.â
In Google We Trust: Usersâ Decisions on Rank, Position, and Relevance; Laura Granka
Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1083-6101.2007.00351.x/pdf
âHow Google Measures Search Qualityâ
Datawocky
http://tinyurl.com/6mpt4u
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Trusting Google too Much?
âSecond: For informational queries âŚ
if a result on page 4, provides better
information than the results on the first three
pages, users will not know this result
exists!â
âTherefore, usage behavior does not
provide the best feedback on the rankings.â
But we are
the best
results!
âHow Google Measures Search Qualityâ
Datawocky
http://tinyurl.com/6mpt4u
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From 2005 to 2014
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2005 Scan Pattern 2014 Scan Pattern
âThe average user
scanned more
results in 2014 vs.
2005, but spent
less time looking
at each result
before clicking a
result.â
THE EVOLUTION OF GOOGLE SEARCH
RESULTS PAGES & THEIR EFFECTS ON
USER BEHAVIOUR
www.mediative.com
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And in 2016
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What explains the change in scan pattern?
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Do students read webpages?
ďŽ In 1997, the first study of how users read web content summarized
the findings in two words: they don't. Users scan it.
ďŽ In 2006, research found that users frequently
scan website ⌠focusing on words at the top
or left side of the page, while barely glancing at
words that appeared elsewhere.
ďŽ Recent research quantified this finding: given the duration of an
average page view, users read at most 28% of the words on the
page.
How Little Do Users Read?
http://www.nngroup.com/articles/how-little-do-users-read/
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Consider this âŚ
âThe computer screen is ⌠literally
a small thing [that] may display just
over 300 words. If this world becomes
our reality, we actually are relying on
less information, not the more that is available.â
âThe Google-ization of Knowledgeâ
Natasja Larson, Laura Servage, and Jim Parsons ; Faculty of Education; University of Alberta
http://www.eric.ed.gov/ERICDocs/data/ericdocs2sql/content_storage_01/0000019b/80/28/03/99.pdf
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Google doesnât need to consider âŚ
⌠the popularity of a website with
searchers because their algorithm is
so up-to-date that Google always
returns the best results.
Right?
RIGHT!
RIGHT!
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Evaluating Googleâs Opinion
Google returns all sites with the words,
martin and luther and king and school and flyers
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Googleâs 1st Result (3-26-2017)
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Martin Luther King.org Homepage
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Martin Luther King.org is hosted by âŚ
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The student wants to know âŚ
Why was that site returned
as the 1st result among the
828,000 results!?!
I thought Google and
other search engines always
returned the best results.
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Checking for .edu Links to the Webpage
ďŽ Link Check â Returns results that are linked to a
site; for example, .edu sites that are linked to
Martin Luther King.org.
Remember the
importance of
PageRank which
measures the number
and quality of links to
a webpage.
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Link Check Results
QUESTION
By reviewing the webpage
description can you determine the
purpose of the .edu sitesâ linking to
Martin Luther King.org?
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Linking and Webpage Relevance
ďŽ When reputable [webpage] author(s)
repeatedly link to a webpage,
or when highly regarded or colleges/universities,
governments, or organizations,
link to a webpage,
the rank of the linked-to webpage increases,
regardless of whether the page is relevant.
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Googleâs opinion is important; âŚ
What can I do to influence the results
returned by Google?
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Question.
ďŽ Search Engine Components
ď¨ Spider/Web Crawler/Robot
ď¨ Index
ď¨ Search Engine
ďŽ The only feature that you can
control is the query entered
into the search engine.
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Keyword Searching
âKeyword-based search works well if the users
know exactly what they want and formulate queries
with the âright words.â
âIt does not help much and is
sometimes even hopeless if the users
only have vague concepts about what
they are asking.â
Toward Topic Search on the Web
Microsoft Research; March 2011
http://research.microsoft.com/apps/pubs/default.aspx?id=145837
Letâs go see
the librarian.
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Queries by Middle School Students
âA predominate difficulty students experience while
performing Web-based research is constructing effective
search strings.â
â[M]iddle school students
demonstrate unsophisticated skills
when constructing search strings,
using mainly broad terms and phrases.â
âInternet Searching by K-12 Students: A Research-based Process Modelâ
http://eric.ed.gov/ERICDocs/data/ericdocs2sql/content_storage_01/0000019b/80/1b/a8/26.pdf
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Queries by High School Students
â [H]igh school students
struggle with conceptualizing
the topic for their query, sometimes omitting
required concepts.â
âInternet Searching by K-12 Students: A Research-based Process Modelâ
http://eric.ed.gov/ERICDocs/data/ericdocs2sql/content_storage_01/0000019b/80/1b/a8/26.pdf
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Queries by College Students
â[S]earch engines generally performed poorly, a
lack of computer skills and an inability
to construct appropriate
search statements limited
college students' success.â
Nowicki, Stacy.
Student vs. Search Engine: Undergraduates Rank Results for Relevance
portal: Libraries and the Academy - Volume 3, Number 3, July 2003
I have query
block!
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What we know and understand is âŚ
âLibrarians realize that for their students
learning a process as complex as research is
like learning a new language.
Librarians see the huge gaps in
actual student ability and know
that the problem is more than something
requiring remedial attention.â
Process Not Product: Learning to be Information Literate
Tami Echavarria Robinson
www.informedlibrarian.com/guestForum.cfm?FILE=gf1309.html
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He should have seen the librarian first!
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The Importance of âFriendsâ
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http://tinyurl.com/kg7kk7q
Remember these stats from
the introduction?
4. Their peers (42%)
8. Online databases (17%)
9. Research librarian at school (16%)
Learning the Ropes: How Freshmen Conduct Course Research Once They Enter College
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Google Search Resources
ďŽ Search Help Center
ď¨ https://support.google.com/websearch#topic=3081620
ď¨ https://goo.gl/Vot32N
ďŽ Advanced Search
ď¨ https://www.google.com/advanced_search
ď¨ https://goo.gl/vGcSrY
ďŽ Operators
ď¨ https://support.google.com/websearch/answer/2466433
ď¨ https://goo.gl/CDc1P2
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