1 / 35

Using a Google Custom Search Engine (CSE)

Using a Google Custom Search Engine (CSE). Sally Kuhlenschmidt January 9, 2009. In this session you will: . Explore ideas for using a Google custom search engine (CSE), including one successful example. Get an overview of how to create your own CSE. What is a CSE?.

ivanbritt
Télécharger la présentation

Using a Google Custom Search Engine (CSE)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Using a Google Custom Search Engine (CSE) Sally Kuhlenschmidt January 9, 2009

  2. In this session you will: • Explore ideas for using a Google custom search engine (CSE), including one successful example. • Get an overview of how to create your own CSE.

  3. What is a CSE? • a tailored search using Google's technology, • which restricts search results based on websites you specify, • Sample: http://www.podnetwork.org/

  4. Why bother? • Narrows search to a subset of the Internet that you choose. • E.g., benchmarks, field specific • Most “hits” are valuable. • Assures a particular quality in websites searched • E.g., only peer-reviewed, only HBCUs, member

  5. Instructional Uses • Provide quality websites in your area for students to use • Instruct students on “quality.” • Have students create their own custom search • Contrast “good” CSE w/ ”bad” CSE • Select “Case” websites for investigating issues, e.g., Fortune 500 businesses

  6. Professional Uses • Search your personal bookmarks • Search benchmark institutions • Research on websites (e.g., X vs Y type of sites) • Alumni or advisee websites • Professional organization—websites of members

  7. Fund raising— • W/permission from local authorities • A student group or unit may set up a CSE and permit advertising. Proceeds go into the unit’s “pot” or into a charity.

  8. Steps for Simple CSE • Google Account • Create CSE • Enter formatted URLs • Use is only you – by accessing your Google Account

  9. 1. Google Account • Try various browsers if one doesn’t work. (Mozilla had some problems). • http://www.google.com/ • Sign In (upper right)…Create an account.

  10. Add CSE to your account • Upper left: More ….Even More….Custom Search. • Option to create new one or manage current (in small print under Create New…)

  11. 2. Create CSE • Complete the 1 page form. Do a simple one first, 4-6 URLs. *Read the Tips on Formatting URLs. Documentation is to the left.

  12. 3. Enter formatted URLs • No “http://” Add * • www.example.com/* to get everything beginning with www.example.com/ • www.example.com/ only gives that single page.

  13. Excluding • You can exclude subparts of websites • See formatting rules.

  14. Returning later • Login…Upper left: More ….Even More….Custom Search. • Option to create new one or manage current (in small print under Create New…) (My Search Engines)

  15. Managing Your CSE • Options • Statistics • Delete– destroys the whole CSE • Control Panel -(change settings.) • Aka Edit this Search Engine

  16. 4. For you only • Who can access? • Only you right now and only from your Google Account.

  17. Collaboration • Volunteer (contacts you) • Contributor (you invite) • Max 100 invites. No limit on # contributors • They need a Google account

  18. Considerations of Collaboration • The websites Cr “sites” are tied to Cr’s account but use your key identifier. • If Cr uses same refinement label as you—it gets added in that category. • If Cr quits, Cr websites go too. • If Cr rejoins, I think you get the websites back. • VERY easy to quit collaborating-one click. There is No“Are you sure?”

  19. Sharing Your CSE w/the World Place code in a website • Control Panel…Code • Copy code for Search box • Optional: Copy code for Search results • Problem: Internet Explorer security question with each page • Paste in your page

  20. Blackboard: Add item. Select html button, Paste in code and Submit. • Results are flush left.

  21. Review • Purposes for CSE • Creating a simple CSE • Formatting of URLs & the CSE • Collaboration issues • Sharing it via BB or other website

  22. What if my collection of URLs gets really big? • And if I’d like the user to be able to “refine” his/her search in specific subcategories?

  23. Steps for Large CSE • Plan • Decide on objectives, criteria • May need alias email for account • Gather, organize, & format URLs in Excel or Access • Create CSE (Google account) • Place ‘CSE label’ into URL file • Upload URLs to CSE

  24. 1. Plan: a. Objectives • Write your objectives • Write your criteria for including a site. • Major subcategories? (refinement labels) • Do you need an alias e-mail? Might you “hand over” this CSE to another?

  25. Plan: b. Gather organize & format URLS • Goal: .txt file (tsv or tab delimited) with the URL’s • How? • By hand in Notepad – not recommended • Excel or Access, passed through Notepad • XML, OPML format is also possible.

  26. 2. Create CSE Once you have your URL file, create your CSE and upload a txt version of that file—see subsequent notes. Make the CSE available as above and enjoy!

  27. The next 6 slides in the presentation provide A link to a website with template URL files for you and a link to a utility for converting Favorites to txt, and Specific suggestions and advice on using the files with Google CSE.

  28. http://www.wku.edu/teaching/services.html • Save “Excel” txt file to desktop. • Open Excel. • Open text file • Options: Tab Delimited, Text qualifier {none} • Save as simplest txt file.

  29. In Access (more control) • Sample • Work from the Query (no primary key). Enter URLs etc. • File Export… ‘As Text File’ • Options: Delimited, tab, Field names 1st row, Text qualifier {none} • To Notepad: • Change field names to Label (not Label2)-first row, don’t lose tabs. • Don’t “clean” data even though it looks messy.

  30. URL File Explained • First label is the CSE label (e.g., _cse_sm5wromxy3). • Other labels are “refinements” (next slide) • Score means how much weight to give a page. 1.0 is top. • Comments – notes to yourself. Just DON’T use tabs in those notes or you throw off the file. • Date format: 20060504 (Doesn’t show)

  31. Refinements • Second and later labels can be “refinements” aka “refinement labels” or “labels” • Short • Keep total number relatively small, 4-10. • *After you have uploaded your file, • go to the Refinement tab and “add” each label (yes, even though you uploaded the file with them).

  32. CSE Control Panel…Advanced • Upload your file. • All CSEs for an account are in the same file • The CSE label in your file (e.g., _cse_sm5wromxy3 found at the Advanced tab) is what sorts URLs into different CSEs. • Can upload multiple files if different file names (e.g., different terms of a class) • Can Download a copy too.

  33. What about later “uploads”? • Each upload is treated as a “new” thing. • Includes everything in the file—even if it is an exact duplicate of a prior website. • Deleting • If you delete the sites individually under the Site tab, the file still displays under the Advanced tab. • You can delete the uploaded file under the Advanced tab & start fresh. • In the Sites tab, sites seem to be listed by order of file uploaded and then alphabetically. I never use the Site tab. I always work from my Access file and replace the old.

  34. Summary • Example • Simple CSE • Large CSE • Planning • Excel vs Access

  35. Thank you

More Related