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As a student, I always enjoyed browsing through different volumes of the encyclopedia. Of course, this was LONG before the internet (class of 1970), LOL.
I remember standing in front of the card catalog for EVER., trying to find the one book I needed for a paper, only to find out someone else had the book. They never returned the book, so I had to change my paper.
Teaching a class on English Comp when Google was new. Took students to library for a class on using it. They had a set of questions to answer.
Two important lessons were learned: One – you can find some amazingly good stuff on the Internet. Two – you can’t trust everything on the internet, some of them discovered pages with wrong information.
Alas, the serendipity of finding something in the pages of a book is—gone! (not really true, but the value of an encyclopedia is certainly questionable now).
we had encyclopedias occupying an entire wall of shelves in the living room when i was a kid. great decorations, read them all the time for fun. the only reason you’d want to own a set now is to fill up some empty bookshelves to try to impress visitors, ’cause much of the information is out of date as soon as the books are printed…
Flashaaway 11 months ago
You can trust the information in encyclopedias.
snsurone76 11 months ago
As a student, I always enjoyed browsing through different volumes of the encyclopedia. Of course, this was LONG before the internet (class of 1970), LOL.
Yakety Sax 11 months ago
It may be =faster= but is it correct?
Last Rose Of Summer Premium Member 11 months ago
I remember standing in front of the card catalog for EVER., trying to find the one book I needed for a paper, only to find out someone else had the book. They never returned the book, so I had to change my paper.
Cornelius Noodleman 11 months ago
Who didn’t see that one coming from a block away?
Izzy Moreno 11 months ago
I still have a couple of encyclopedias.
The Reader Premium Member 11 months ago
AI: Aged Intelligence
LawrenceS 11 months ago
Teaching a class on English Comp when Google was new. Took students to library for a class on using it. They had a set of questions to answer.
Two important lessons were learned: One – you can find some amazingly good stuff on the Internet. Two – you can’t trust everything on the internet, some of them discovered pages with wrong information.
tcayer 11 months ago
Unless the country you’re trying to look up wasn’t around when the encyclopedia was published…
tcayer 11 months ago
If he knew to do that, why did he ask her in the first place?
vacman 11 months ago
My set (that I still use on occasion) is dated 1964.
darcyandsimon 11 months ago
Alas, the serendipity of finding something in the pages of a book is—gone! (not really true, but the value of an encyclopedia is certainly questionable now).
jonescientific 11 months ago
The problem with just googling things is that so often you don’t really know what to look for.
ladykat Premium Member 11 months ago
My daughter has the encyclopedia I bought her when she was a child. I have my father’s WWII era edition.
Danae Premium Member 11 months ago
And all he learned is a word :-(
grange Premium Member 11 months ago
I would read the entire entry and then torture my family by reciting it at supper.
kooladge 11 months ago
I read the encyclopedia when I was a kid! A person at that time could open up the books and ask me a question and I knew it!
dlkrueger33 11 months ago
I loved to “read” the encyclopedia for fun. I guess I thought one day I might be on Jeopardy.
cuzinron47 11 months ago
But you learned something Broomie, there’s a better way.
marshalljpeters Premium Member 11 months ago
I read his question as “Alabama”, and was really confused by the answer he found.
gopher gofer 11 months ago
we had encyclopedias occupying an entire wall of shelves in the living room when i was a kid. great decorations, read them all the time for fun. the only reason you’d want to own a set now is to fill up some empty bookshelves to try to impress visitors, ’cause much of the information is out of date as soon as the books are printed…