
Connecting to the World Wide Web
One of the most prominent ways of doing research and communicating
with other people is using the World Wide Web. The World Wide Web is a
collection of all of the Web sites available on the Internet. A Web site
is a collection of Web pages in a given location, and it is often for a
particular organization such as a company, an educational institution,
or a non-profit group. The address, or URL, of the Web site will tell
you what kind of organization has posted the site. The URL for a
commercial site will end with .com, an educational institution with .edu,
and a non-profit group with .org.
A Web page is a file that can contain text, pictures, and other
multimedia. The Web is an exciting medium for students because it
creates a dynamic and interactive learning environment. Web pages often
contain links to other Web sites. A link is a word or a picture that,
when you click on it, takes you to another place on that Web page,
another Web page, or another Web site.
To connect to the World Wide Web using an Internet connection on your
network, you must access the network and then open the browser on your
computer. The Microsoft Internet Explorer 4.0 browser is an integrated
component of Windows 98. When the browser opens, you see your default
home page, from which you will always start your searches. You can go to
other Web pages by clicking links on the Home page or by typing the
address to a Web site in the Address bar, which is usually located at
the top of the browser window.
To open the browser window and load a Web page
- Click the Launch Internet Explorer Browser button on the
Quick Launch toolbar located on the taskbar. The browser window
opens. If you are using a dial-up connection, the Dial-Up
Connection dialog box appears.
- Connect to your Internet Service Provider if necessary by entering
your username and password.
- Once connected to the Internet, the browser will load your default
home page. You will see the URL (uniform resource locator, otherwise
known as a web address) for the Web site in the Address bar. The
following illustration shows the MSN home page.

- A. Web Page Title
- B. Toolbars
- C. Address bar and URL
- D. Status bar
- E. Internet Explorer Logo
- Spins when accessing data.
- F. Scroll bar
- G. Document Window

Navigating the World Wide Web
You have already discovered how easy it is to navigate through files
and folders on your computer with the Web style desktop. Despite the
vast amount of information on the World Wide Web, navigating it is just
as easy. Each of the features discussed below will help you find what
you need (and probably some unexpected surprises) on the Web.
Toolbars
With Microsoft Internet Explorer 4.0, you have the familiar Menu bar,
Standard toolbar, Links toolbar, and Address toolbar. The following
buttons are on the Standard toolbar:
- Back and Forward-return to pages you have just
visited. You can select from a drop down list of recently visited
pages.
- Stop-stop the computer from loading a page.
- Refresh-reloads the current page.
- Home-return to your default home page (the page that loads
first when you start Internet Explorer.
- Search-opens the Explorer bar so you can do a keyword
search of the Web.
- Favorites-opens the Explorer bar and displays your
favorites folders, including Web subscriptions.
- History-opens the Explorer bar and displays a list of all
of the Web pages that you have visited recently. You can set your
computer to delete this history at a regular time interval like
every day, or once a week. You can also manually delete the history,
just right-click on the day you want to delete and choose Delete.
- Channels-displays the Active Channel™ Web content guide
in the Explorer bar.
- Full Screen-uses more of the desktop to display the page.
Only the Standard toolbar is shown.
- Mail-opens your e-mail program so that you can check for
new messages, or email the page or a link to it.
- Print-sends the current page to your default printer.
- Edit-opens the current page in your Web page editor (such
as FrontPage Express, the Web page editor that is a component of
Windows 98).
Explorer Bar
When you click the Search, Favorites, History, or Channels buttons
the Explorer bar will appear in the left pane of the browser window. The
Explorer bar displays the contents of whichever button you have chosen.
For example, the Search button will display the search engine of your
choice. To close the Explorer bar, click again on the button you used to
open it.
Status Bar
The Status bar at the bottom of the Internet Explorer window is a
helpful way to keep track of what the browser is doing. The Status bar
shows you the following information:
- A description appears when you select a command from the Menu bar.
- The target address (URL) appears when you point to a link.
- Status icons such as the security padlock and the printer appear
on the right.

Finding Information on the World Wide Web
The amount of information on the Web is vast and can be overwhelming.
Since there is no possible way to know every address of every Web site
you might want to visit, your browser includes the capability to search
for key words and phrases, just like the computerized catalogs at
libraries.
Internet Explorer 4.0 has a Search button that, when clicked,
opens a Search pane in the Explorer bar from which you can access
several search engines. A search engine is a program on the Internet
that allows you to search for the key words for a topic, or to search a
broad category, such as science, for Web sites that interest you. When
you type in a key word and start the search, the search engine finds the
Web sites that contain the chosen key word. Key words can be very
general or more specific. For example, you might search for
"botany," which is very general, or "tropical
plants" or "ferns" which are more specific. However,
general key words will probably return a long list of Web sites; you may
want to use a more precise key word to return a more focused list.
To search using a key word
- On the Standard toolbar, click the Search button. The
search pane opens on the left side of the window.
- Click on the down arrow to the left of the Search provider
box to display a list of search engines.
- Click on a search engine name such as Yahoo. The Yahoo!
search engine opens in the left pane.

- A. Explorer bar
- B. Select provider
- from the drop down list
- C. Yahoo! Search field and Search Button
- D. Left Pane
- Search result links will appear.
- E. Status bar
- F. Right Pane
- Web page appears here when you click on a link.
- Type a keyword or phrase in the search box. Use quotations if you
want the search engine to search for the entire phrase, such as
"carnivorous plants," otherwise the search engine will
return pages with any of the search terms in the Web site, or all
sites containing "carnivorous" and all sites containing
"plants."
- Click the Yahoo!
- button.
- Yahoo! will return a list of Web site links containing the keyword
or phrase. Click on any link that is of interest.
- To view the Web site in the entire window, click Search to
close the Explorer bar. Click Fullscreen to display the page
in even more of the screen.

Subscribing to a Web Page
Another characteristic of the World Wide Web is that it is dynamic;
information is changing all the time. Some Web sites are updated on a
regular basis-weekly, daily, even hourly-while others may go for months
without changing. You may find Web sites you will want to revisit when
information has been changed or updated. If you want to be notified when
something on a Web site changes, you can subscribe to the Web site.
Unlike subscriptions to journals or periodicals, Web subscriptions do
not cost money; they are only requests for notification when a site has
been updated.
When you subscribe to a Web page, your browser checks the Web site,
at an interval you choose, to see if changes have been made to the page
since your last visit. If changes have occurred, the browser can notify
you by e-mail and copy the page to your computer. You determine which
options you want for each subscription.
To subscribe to a Web page
- In either Internet Explorer or Windows Explorer, open the Web page
that you want to subscribe to.
- Click Favorites on the menu bar and then click Add to Favorites.
The Add Favorites dialog box opens.
- Choose an option. To subscribe to the web page, select one of the
Yes options, depending on if you want to view the page offline.
- Click the Customize button.
- If you have not chosen to view the page offline, you have the
option of receiving e-mail notification when the page is
updated.
- If you have chosen to download the page for offline viewing
you can set the time intervals that you want the page to be
downloaded and request e-mail notification.
- Click the Create in>> button. The dialog box expands
to show the available folders. Click on a folder to open it, or
click the New Folder button to create a new folder to store the
subscription in.
- Click OK.
The page is stored as a link in the folder you have placed it in.
When the page is updated, the link icon for the page will gleam red.
To update automatically or change a subscription
- Click Favorites on the Menu bar and then click Manage
Subscriptions. The Subscriptions window opens. Your
subscriptions are listed in the right pane.
- Click View and select Details to show the
subscription details including last update time and next update
time.
- Select the subscription you want to update or delete by pointing
to it (or click on it if you are using the classic style desktop).
- To delete the subscription, click the Delete button. A
dialog box opens. Click Yes to confirm the deletion.
- To update the subscription, click the Update button. A
dialog box opens and displays the download progress. This box
closes automatically when the update is complete.
To update all subscriptions at once, click the Update all
button on the standard toolbar, or, click Favorites on the menu
bar and then click Update All Subscriptions.

Adding Active Content Items
Active content is information from the World Wide Web that constantly
changes. When you choose the View As Web Page option for your desktop,
the channel bar appears. The Channel bar is your "remote
control" to active channels, Web sites which change content on a
regular basis. You can choose from over 3000 active channels, and add
icons for those you want to use on your channel bar.
You can search for active channels of interest to you and other
active content from the Microsoft Media Showcase gallery.
To add an Active Channel to your channel bar
- Click Channel Guide on the Channel bar. The Microsoft
Windows Media Showcase opens.

Note:
If the channel bar is not on the desktop, click Start,
point to Settings, point to Active Desktop, and click View
as Web Page. If the channel bar still does not appear, click Start,
point to Settings, click Control Panel, and click the
Display icon. Click the Web tab, select Internet Explorer
Channel Bar, and click OK.
- Click the red Search button on the Media Showcase web page.
- Follow the directions on the page to search for Active Channels
and other media of interest to you.
- Your search results will be displayed as logos on the left side of
the window. Click on a logo to preview the active channel.
- To add the channel to your Channel bar, click the blue Add
Active Channel button.
To add active media to your desktop
- Click the Start button to open the Start menu.
- Point to Settings, point to Active Desktop, and then
click Customize My Desktop. The Display Properties
dialog box opens with the Web tab displayed.
- Click New. The New Active Desktop Item dialog box
asks you if you want to connect to the Microsoft Active Media
Gallery on the World Wide Web.
- Click Yes. You will need a network or dial-up connection to
the World Wide Web to complete this activity. The Internet Explorer
browser will open and load the Active Media Showcase web page.

- Select your search criteria and enter a key word and then click
the red
- button.
- The search results will be displayed as logos on the left side of
the window. Click a logo to preview the active channel and active
content item.
- Click the orange Add Active Content button to add the item
to your desktop. You can hide items you have added to your desktop
from the Web tab of the Display Properties dialog box.
Active content desktop items will update regularly while the
computer is connected to the Internet through a dial-up or network
connection.

A Word About Security
There has been quite a bit of discussion about privacy and security
of information sent over the Internet. When you send information over
the Internet, it might be passed through several computers before it
reaches the recipient's computer. If your information passes through
another computer, it could be seen by someone other than the person you
intended. When you are about to send information to the Internet Zone, a
security alert message will open to remind you of this possibility.
Some companies conducting business over the Internet provide secure
sites for people to transmit private information such as credit card
numbers. When a site is secured, information that you send is encrypted
and can't be read by other people. If a site is secure, its address
(URL) will start with "https." Also, a padlock icon will
appear on the gray Status bar at the bottom of the browser window.
Using Outlook Express
Electronic mail, or e-mail is quickly becoming one of the most widely
used forms of communication in the world. It is fast, convenient, and
does not cost anything in addition to the normal charges associated with
the Internet connection. Using e-mail, you can send a simple text
message like a reminder about an assignments, or you can send a message
with other files attached to it, such as a grade report created in
Microsoft Excel or a worksheet created in Microsoft Word that a student
may have missed. The message can also contain links to other e-mail
addresses or Web sites, so you can send students Web pages that you want
them to look at. With a microphone, you can even send voice messages!
Outlook Express is the e-mail program that comes with Windows 98. To
open the program, click on the Outlook Express desktop icon or Quick
Launch button. When you open Outlook Express, the left side of the
window, called the Folder pane, displays the various folders in the
program used to receive, send, and store e-mail messages. The right side
of the window displays several shortcuts to the different tasks you can
do: Read Mail, Read News, Compose a Message, Address Book, Download All,
and Find People. The following illustration shows the Outlook Express
window.
Sending a message
You can send a message to a person by typing in his or her e-mail
address in the To box. Or you can use an address stored in your
electronic address book. With Outlook Express you can also create e-mail
messages on designer backgrounds called stationery.
To compose and send a message
- Start Outlook Express.
- On the standard toolbar, click the Compose Message button
and then click on a stationery type, browse for other or custom
stationery, or click No Stationery to send the message on a white
background. The New Message window opens.
- In the To field, type the e-mail address of the person to whom you
are sending the message. If you are sending to more than one person,
type a semicolon (;) after the e-mail address.
- or -
Click the To button to open your address books. Select an address
book, and double-click a name. The address moves to the To
Message Recipients field.
- Repeat step 3 to add more e-mail addresses to the To field.
- To CC (carbon copy) someone (optional), click in the CC
field. Type the e-mail address in the field, or click CC,
choose an address from one of your address books, and click OK.
Repeat to CC other people.
- To blind CC someone (CC someone without the other message
recipients knowing the person received the message) (optional),
click in the BCC field. Type the e-mail address in the field,
or click BCC, choose an address from one of your address
books, and click OK. Repeat to blind CC other people.
- To add a subject line to the message, click in the Subject
field and type a brief line regarding the subject of the message.
- Click in the blank field below the Subject field and type
your message.
- When you are satisfied with your message, click Send. The
message automatically moves to your Outbox folder and you return to
the main Outlook window.
- If you are always connected to the network and Internet
connection, your message is automatically sent.
- or -
Click Send And Receive to connect to the Internet connection
and send the message.
When the message has been sent, it moves to the Sent Items folder. If
the message cannot be delivered to someone, you will usually, but not
always, receive an automatic reply letting you know who could not be
reached and why.
Attaching a file to a message
Sometimes you need to add information to an e-mail message that would
be too time consuming or inconvenient to retype in the message. For
example, if you had a school newsletter you wanted to send to parents or
a class schedule you needed to send to students, it would not be
convenient to retype the information when it already exists in another
document. In these types of situations, you can attach an electronic
copy of the document to your e-mail message.
When you attach a file to an e-mail message, keep in mind that the
recipient must have a program that can read the file. For example, if
you attach a Word 97 file to the message but the recipient only has Word
7 or Corel WordPerfect, the recipient won't be able to open the
attachment.
To attach a file
- In the Outlook Express program, address the e-mail message. (See To
compose and send a message above.)
- Type a message in the blank message field below the Subject
field (optional).
- Position the cursor in the message field where you want to insert
the file. This can be at the beginning, at the end, or anywhere in
between.
- On the Insert menu, click File. The Insert File
dialog box opens.
- Locate the file you want to attach. Click the file and click OK.
An icon representing the file labeled with the file name appears in
the message.
- To insert other files, repeat steps 4 and 5.
- Send the message as you normally would. (See To
compose and send a message above.)
Receiving and reading a message
When Outlook Express receives messages, it stores them in your Inbox
folder. The number next to the word Inbox on the left side of the window
tells you how many messages are waiting for you. If there is no number,
you have no new messages.
When you click the Inbox folder on the left side of the window, the
contents of the folder are displayed on the upper, right portion of the
window, which is called the Message List pane. The Message List pane
shows the subject and author of the messages in the Inbox. If a message
header is bold, that message has not yet been read. If the message
header is not bold, the message has been opened.
The lower right portion of the screen is called the Message Contents
pane, and it shows you a preview of the message selected in the Message
List pane. This feature allows you to scan the message contents to see
if and when to read that message. To preview the contents of another
message, just click another message header in the Message List pane.
To receive and read messages
- Open the Outlook Express program.
- If you are always connected to the network and the Internet
connection, any messages sent to you are automatically received to
your Inbox folder, and, if you have new messages, an envelope icon
appears in the taskbar.
- or -
Click Send And Receive. The computer connects to the Internet
connection and tries to retrieve your messages to your Inbox folder.
(It also sends any messages in your Outbox folder.)
- In the Folder pane, click your Inbox folder. If it has a number
next to it, you have new or unread messages. New and unread messages
appear in bold in the Message List pane.
- To read a new message, click it in the Message List pane. The
contents of the message are displayed in the Message Contents pane.
- Double-click the message. The message opens in its own window.
- When you are finished, you can close the message, and it remains
in that folder.
You can also do other tasks with the message, such as delete it,
reply to it, or save it to another location on your computer or the
network. For information on these and other options, see the
documentation that came with the Outlook Express program, or Outlook
Express Help.
Adding e-mail addresses to the address book
If you frequently e-mail the same information to the same people, you
can also build distribution lists. For example, you might build a
distribution list of all the students in your class or all of the
parents of the students, a list of conference participants for a
conference you are organizing, or a list of other educators with whom
you share a research interest. Then, when you need to e-mail something
to everyone in the group, such as a permission slip, an agenda, or an
interesting Web site link, you can choose the distribution list name
from your address book instead of each address separately.
To add e-mail addresses to the address book
- On the Tools menu, click Address Book.
- On the File menu, click New Entry. The New Entry
dialog box opens.
- From the Select the entry type field, choose the type of
address the new recipient has. If you do not know the type, choose Other
Address.
- In the Put this entry box, the In the radio button
should be selected. From the list, select the address book to which
you want to add the new address and click OK.
- In the dialog box that opens, fill the fields with the appropriate
information. (If you do not know some of the information, contact
your system administrator.) When finished, click OK.
- Repeat steps 2 through 5 to add more addresses.
- When finished, close the Address Book dialog box.
To build a distribution list
- On the Tools menu, click Address Book.
- On the File menu, click New Entry. The New Entry
dialog box opens.
- From the Select the entry type field, click Personal
Distribution List and click OK. The New Personal Distribution
List Properties dialog box opens.
- On the Distribution tab, type a name for the distribution
list in the Name field.
- Click Add/Remove Members.
- In the Show the names from the list, select the address
book from which you want to copy addresses into the distribution
list. A list of the addresses in that book appears in the left side
of the window.
- To add a name to the distribution list, select it in the list on
the left and click Members. The address moves to the right
side of the window.
- To remove a name, select it on the right side of the window and
press DELETE.
- Repeat steps 6 through 8 to add and remove other addresses in the
list.
- When finished, click OK. You return to the New Personal
Distribution List Properties dialog box, and the members of the
list appear in the window.
- Click OK to close the dialog box. Then, close the address
book.

Discussion Groups
Another way to communicate with others in the global community is
through online discussions. There are two types of discussions: real
time and bulletin boards. In real time, discussions are interactive. You
type messages that the other participants can immediately see and
answer. "Chat rooms" are an example of real time discussions.
Bulletin boards are ongoing postings that anyone can read and reply to
at any time. News groups are an example of bulletin board discussions.
You can find both chat rooms and news groups of interest to you through
an online service such as MSN. You may also find discussion groups of
interest as you search the Web. For bulletin board discussion groups
that you find on the Web, you will be given directions to subscribe to a
"list" by sending a simple e-mail message. You will then
receive messages posted to the bulletin board in your e-mail. Bulletin
boards are an excellent way to keep up with current discussions about
topics of interest to you. You can find discussion groups on everything
from Renaissance literature to bioethics to service learning. Encourage
your students to subscribe to and post messages to appropriate bulletin
boards; it is an excellent way for them to share the knowledge they are
gaining in the classroom.

Putting it Together
Now that you have learned how to communicate with the global
community and bring the World Wide Web to your desktop, you can try the
following ideas to get the most out of being connected in and out of the
classroom:
- To teach Internet searching skills, create a World Wide Web
"scavenger hunt" on a relevant topic.
- Share lesson plans with teachers from all over the world! There
are several Web sites that catalog lesson plans for all grade levels
and subjects. Two good ones are:
- Subscribe to the Microsoft Education Web page and be automatically
notified when new information for educators about using Microsoft
products and services in the classroom is added. While you are
there, sign up to receive the Microsoft Education K-12 or Higher Ed
newsletters through e-mail.
- Have students observe and make calculations and predictions about
local weather patterns. Find a weather map active content item to
display on the Active Desktop. Share your data with students in
another geographic region through e-mail or a class Web page.
- Have students participate in mock stock exchange games to teach
economic principles. Students can track their stocks by placing a
stock ticker active content item on the Active Desktop.
- Encourage students to use Internet sources in their research
papers. Discuss authority, authenticity, applicability and bias when
using information from the Internet. Teach students how to attribute
Internet sources in their papers. You may also want to discuss other
issues associated with Internet information such as intellectual
property rights, free speech, and censorship.
- Search for online education journals of interest to you. Bookmark
or subscribe to them.
- Search the active channels for sites that can give you teaching
ideas and help students learn more about your subject. You can then
add the channels to your Favorites list, or subscribe to the active
channels. Outstanding sites include:
- Use search engines to find information specific to a lesson you
are teaching.
For example, if you are teaching a biology lesson on invertebrates,
you can do a search on the term invertebrate to find fun and
interesting sites, then direct your students to these sites when
appropriate.
- At Back-to-School Night, or when you meet parents for the first
time, ask for their e-mail addresses. You can then communicate with
parents and send them:
- Calendars of classroom activities and assignment due dates.
- Student progress reports.
- Reminders about upcoming school activities, PTA meetings, and
parent-teacher conferences.
- Use e-mail to communicate with other teachers about staff meetings
and other school activities. E-mail can be read at the teachers'
convenience and need not take away from teaching time.
- Have students correspond through e-mail with students in another
geographic location. Also encourage them to send e-mail to others
they may not know, such as scholars who have published information
about the students' research paper topics, local or national
political representatives, or favorite children's book authors.
Discuss e-mail etiquette and appropriate tone for different types of
correspondence.