You can find websites using search engines such as Google (http://www.google.com) or All the Web (http://www.alltheweb.com/). Google is fast and thorough. It is the one I use most often nowadays. I used to like Infoseek (http://infoseek.go.com) because it allowed you to search within a set of search results. It also suggested closely related searches that might be useful. But it's become an ad factory.
I wrote a brief lesson on search engines, which you can see at http://environmentalet.org/searching.htm, but it's getting a bit old. Check out the Internet info (http://library.albany.edu/internet/searchnet.html) from the University at Albany Libraries.
Websites are hard to evaluate. It's easy to confuse form and substances (ie, if a site looks good, we tend to believe the stuff that's there).
Ask the following questions about any site you are viewing:
Some links for more tips on evaluating websites:
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Anthony G Benoit
Room 205 (860) 885-2386
abenoit@trcc.commnet.edu
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