/ Evaluating Sources Handout

Evaluating Sources

A crucial step for a successful research paper is to evaluate the potential information sources and select

the best information that suits your topic. Ask yourself the following questions about your sources:

Criteria for Evaluating Sources

What? / What does the work cover? Is it relevant to my topic? / If an abstract is available, read it. Scan the full text and look at the thesis, statement and conclusion.
When? / When was the work written? Is the
information up to date enough for the topic chosen or do you need historical information / Check the publication date. In fields such as medicine, science & technology, currency is important. In fields such as history & literature, older materials may be just as valuable as newer ones.
Who? / Who is the author or sponsor? / Type the author's name in Google.com and see if you can retrieve some background information about the author.
Why? / Why was the work written? What was its purpose, to inform or to persuade? What was the bias/perspective/ motivation? / Check who publishes or sponsors the source.
How? / How was the work written? Was it written at a level you can understand and use

Use the chart on the next page, to help you decide if the websites you find are appropriate to use for your assignments:

Wikipedia

7 Things You Should Know About . . . Wikipediaby EDUCAUSE

Researching with Wikipediaby Wikipedia

Using Wikipediaby Carleton College

Tutorials about Evaluating Sources

Credible Sources Count!by Vaughan Memorial Library, Acadia University

Evaluating Internet Sites 101!by University at Albany Libraries

Evaluating Sources of Informationby VCCS Connect for Success Information Literacy Tutorial - Module 6

Evaluating Web Sites > Overview - Key Ideasby net.TUTOR. Ohio State University Libraries

Evaluating Information on the Webby Drexel University Libraries

Evaluate Web Pagesby Wolfgram Memorial Library, Widener University

Evaluating Web Resources by University of Arizona Libraries

Many thanks to JSRCC Library and Kimbel Library for the design orinformation usedin this guide.

Last updated 03/2012