For many of us, life without the Internet is unimaginable. Sending emails, posting to Facebook and Instagraming our lunch are daily activities. But for some members of the baby boomer generation and older, navigating the World Wide Web is challenging, scary and even dangerous.
, professor of information systems at the 萌妹社区–St. Louis, has published a new book aimed at making the process a little easier for both older individuals and their family members trying to teach them.
Her book, “,” covers the basics of navigating websites and searches, using social media, identifying scams and how to be safe online.
“I got the idea for this book while I was taking a YMCA water aerobics class,” Sauter said. “There were a lot of older people in the class, and once they learned I knew about computers, they started asking me questions, which is a little difficult to explain in the pool. To try to get to the problem, I would ask them questions such as, ‘Well, what browser are you using?’ and they’d reply, ‘I’m not using a browser.’ Clearly I needed more simplistic questions. I would move to questions such as, ‘What kind of icon do you click on?'”
Sauter began writing the 259-page paperback several years ago and then stepped away from it for a while. Knowing the need was still there for a guide to help the older generation learn the ins and outs of the Internet, she revisited it and updated a few things.
Reviewed 2015-04-24