How do we keep our kids focused in their free Web searches while we ensure their discovery of the stuff we know is worthy of discovering? A Google Custom Search Engine could be the answer.
A Google Custom search (or CSE) allows you to guide searchers to the sites you want them to search or sites they most need to search. This may be especially useful for younger learners who may truly benefit from a filtered, noise-free search experience. You select specific sites that your search engine will search. And you continue to refine the search as you make discoveries and watch users interact. And then, voila! You embed the handy little boxes on yours and your teachers’ websites and Guides.
Generally, you create a CSE for two reasons.
1. Because you want folks to easily find content on your own growing site. (Check out how ALA uses a CSE for a site search.)Preview
2. Because you want to lead searchers to a subset of very useful, trusted websites and help them to avoid the noise of an unfocused Web search.
Your CSE could lead:
Here’s a little tutorial I created to help you get started:
Here are the simple directions from Google’s Custom Search Help page:
This is the CSE on the US Presidents I was able to launch in around 15 minutes.
Beyond this tutorial, you can add refinements, for instance, labels that further annotate sites to filter for specific content or push the priorities you choose in search results.
It always surprises me how few librarians know this handy trick, one I teach my students in our search course. And it is entirely possible that your more serious young searchers may want to create CSEs of their own for major projects or passions.
Like a new car you just bought, once you create a CSE, you’ll notice them all over the (road) Web!
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