John T. Carr
Reading 4
“The Infodiet: How Libraries Can Offer an Appetizing Alternative to Google”
Steven Bell
Chronicle of Higher Education
In Steven Bell’s article he talks about the comparison of Google’s easy research and the academic library research. Both are totally different. I use Google research everytime I do have a research paper to do and also do use the scholarly searches also. The article argues that student do want the scholarly research to be easy to access like Google as it. To me it would nice to have the ability to look up something easy and something like Google does. The only bad thing about this is when you do use Google to find something it give you usually a broad search.
The broad searches that Google give me I use them in academic research databases to get more specific. Majority of college students want it right in there face not having to work for it, like traditional “old School” researchers want. Steven Bell that admit that he does want libraries to Googl-ize some of the research process that each one has and make some what universal. Honestly I feel like it would never happen because for one libraries pay for the articles and academic research they have in their systems. I wouldn’t want my stuff to be easy to access for anyone. Another reason is the research time the people spent to have the research. Someone had to do the research first for it to be available for everyone else and they may have taken years.
Google itself has made a lot of things easier in the last five to ten years. It’s to the point now that I hear and know professors that want you to use Google first or other search engines. Google can be a first palce to start just like Wikipedia is. Somewhere you can start but not finish all research. Using academic research engines or databases are the best to find true and accredited research.