When using the Boolean
operator OR, you tell the computer to locate documents that contain
any one of your search terms. Using OR in your keyword search includes
all the pages that contain ANY one of your search words. Think of
it this way: IF I ride with my mom OR IF I ride with my brother,
THEN I will have a ride to the party. Either way, you would get to
the party, right? (It is best to capitalize Boolean operators because
some search engines require it.)
Here's an example:
weather OR climate
You need to put one space before and after the word
OR.
Here's a fun jingle to help you remember:
OR finds mORe, but
AND gets less.
Learn these now
For greater access.
Turn on Rockwell
Schrock's Boolean Machine to better
understand the concept of using OR. Roll your cursor over AND, OR,
and NOT and watch what happens to the picture.
These two search statements will help you find
documents that contain either of the words, weather OR climate.
Let's try this search with NC
WiseOwl. Quick tip:
Print these directions before you link to the site.
(If you are asked for a password, type: wiseowl.)
- Click ENCYCLOPEDIAS on
the NC
WiseOwl home page.
- Click the OPEN button underneath Grolier Multimedia
Encyclopedia.
- Find the search box, and then click on the button
labeled ADVANCED. You're going to do an advanced search using
Boolean logic!
- Make sure FULL TEXT
SEARCH is selected.
You want to search through entire articles, not the "article
titles only."
- Type or paste weather in the first search box.
- Select OR from the drop menu, then type climate in the search box to the right of OR.
- How many "hits" did you get?
____
- Skim the list of titles until you see one that sounds
interesting to read.
- Return to the Advanced Search Window and try the
same search, except use AND instead of OR. (See steps 5 and 6.)
- How many "hits" did you get?_____
What a change! Did OR get more? Yes!
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