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Citation Style Guide: Evaluating Sources

Citation Guide for MLA 8th, APA 7th Edition, Chicago/Turabian, WestLaw

Information Literacy: The Perils of Online Research

It Is Important To Evaluate Internet Resources!

 

 

Checklist For Quality

Ask these questions when evaluating any resource you are considering using in your research:

CurrencyThe timeliness of the information.

  • When was the information published or posted?
  • Has the information been revised or updated?
  • Does your topic require current information, or will older sources work as well?

RelevanceThe importance of the information for your needs.

  • Does the information relate to your topic or answer your question?
  • Who is the intended audience?
  • Is the information at an appropriate level (i.e. not too elementary or advanced for your needs)?
  • Have you looked at a variety of sources before determining this is one you will use?

AuthorityThe source of the information.

  •  Who is the author/publisher/source/sponsor? What are the author's credentials or organizational affiliations?
  • Is the author qualified to write on the topic?
  • Is there contact information, such as a publisher or email address?
  • Does the URL reveal anything about the author or source?
  • examples: .com .edu .gov .org .net

AccuracyThe reliability, truthfulness, and correctness of the content.

  • Where does the information come from?
  • Is the information supported by evidence?
  •  Has the information been reviewed?
  • Can you verify any of the information in another source or from personal knowledge?
  • Does the language or tone seem unbiased and free of emotion?
  • Are there spelling, grammar, or typographical errors?

Purpose: The reason the information exists.

  • What is the purpose of the information? Is it to inform, teach, sell, entertain or persuade?
  • Do the authors/sponsors make their intentions or purpose clear?
  • Is the information fact, opinion, or propaganda?
  • Does the point of view appear objective and impartial?
  • Are there political, ideological, cultural, religious, institutional, or personal biases?

Ask-A-Librarian

CRAAP Test: Currency, Relevance, Authority, Accuracy, and Purpose

Evaluating Websites

 

Evaluating Journal Articles

Evaluating Images