IMO, the phrase "let me google it" has embedded itself into common language. Society unhesitantly uses it as a replacement for looking up or researching topics. I use it in classrooms where students need a deeper contextual understanding of something. The nucleus example above is a great example of how "google a cell and its parts" provides students with a clear picture of cell. Rather than explaining verbal what mitochondria looks like...
I use terms like "google the word 'history' and tell me some of the images that appear...
IMO, the phrase "let me google it" has embedded itself into common language. Society unhesitantly uses it as a replacement for looking up or researching topics. I use it in classrooms where students need a deeper contextual understanding of something. The nucleus example above is a great example of how "google a cell and its parts" provides students with a clear picture of cell. Rather than explaining verbal what mitochondria looks like...
I use terms like "google the word 'history' and tell me some of the images that appear...
Andres Reyes, Aug 30 2018 on mrreyes.withknown.com