Sovi.AI - AI Math Tutor

Scan to solve math questions

QUESTION IMAGE

which of the following is the best strategy for effective online search…

Question

which of the following is the best strategy for effective online searching?
a typing in full questions, like \what should i know about hurricanes for school?\
b using only the first results that come up on each search.
c using specific keyboards and quotes around exact phrases
d using general terms so that you get more search results.
e i havent learned this yet.

question 11
what could you look for to determine if a website is credible?
a who the author is, what their motivation is, when it was written, and what domain type the url includes.
b the website comes up first on a google search and is popular on social media.
c the title looks official, the vocabulary used is professional, and the site design is clean and easy to read.
d the opinions shared on they website are similar to your own opinions.
e i havent learned this yet.

question 12
why is it important to understand copyright and to cite sources when using information created by others?
a so your paper looks longer and has more details
b because teachers require a certain number of sources for each project
c to give credit to the original creator and avoid plagiarism
d to make your work more popular on social media
e i havent learned this yet.

Explanation:

Response
Question (about effective online searching)
Brief Explanations
  • Option a: Typing full questions can lead to less relevant results as search engines may not parse natural language questions optimally.
  • Option b: Using only first results limits exploration; later results might be relevant too.
  • Option c: Specific keywords and quotes for exact phrases help narrow down and get precise results, which is a good online search strategy.
  • Option d: General terms give too many irrelevant results, making it hard to find what's needed.
  • Option e: Not applicable as the question is about known strategies.
Brief Explanations
  • Option a: Author’s identity, motivation, publication date, and URL domain (e.g., .edu, .gov) are key factors in assessing credibility (authority, timeliness, domain reliability).
  • Option b: Popularity on social media or being first in search doesn’t ensure credibility (could be biased or unvetted).
  • Option c: Visual design and professional vocabulary don’t guarantee factual accuracy or credibility.
  • Option d: Agreeing with opinions doesn’t relate to credibility (credibility is about accuracy, not personal agreement).
  • Option e: Not applicable as the concept of website credibility is teachable.
Brief Explanations
  • Option a: Citing sources isn’t about making papers longer; it’s about giving credit.
  • Option b: Teachers’ requirements are a secondary reason; the primary is ethical and legal (giving credit, avoiding plagiarism).
  • Option c: Citing sources gives credit to original creators and prevents plagiarism, which is the core purpose of copyright understanding and citation.
  • Option d: Citing sources doesn’t relate to social media popularity.
  • Option e: Not applicable as the concept of copyright and plagiarism is a standard academic topic.

Answer:

c. Using specific keyboards and quotes around exact phrases

Question 11 (determine website credibility)