Part 2:
Ask: The Questions I Needed to Ask Were:
- What are the effects of exposure overtime?
- How much does it sell for?
- How rare is it?
- How does it affect humans without our knowledge? (Amount in air, water, etc.)
- Is there a living thing that has built some sort of immunity to radiation?
- What is it?
- Who discovered it?
- What are some common uses?
Acquire: Here are the Tools I used to gather my information:
- Pexels.com
- Gale Engage Learning
- EasyBib
Analyze: Here is how I got my information and cited my sources:
To keep track of all the information I acquired, I used a separate word document to keep it all organized before I made my sway. I used a variety of reliable sources to get as much useful information on my element, while keeping it in my own words. I cited all my sources with EasyBib, and found non-copyright images to cite as well.
Assess: This is how the product and process went.
I am satisfied with how much information I was able to share about most of my questions, I do wish I added a bit more information to a few, but the question was able to be answered in a sentence or two. On the topic of the Information Fluency Process, I did everything that I could have, I asked good questions, acquired good information, and filtered out the good sources from the bad. Looking back, I do wish I used even more sources (instead of mostly google) to expand my digital toolbox of sources to use later in my high school career.