What questions should you ask when evaluating a source? How can you tell if information you find is credible? This presentation might help you answers these questions.
2. Why do you need the information?
Is it for …
an assignment?
-a paper? a project?
a project outside of class?
-career help? a personal research project?
personal entertainment?
-a recipe, the latest Hollywood gossip, your favorite meme?
4. Who?
Who wrote or presented this
information?
Does the person have the
qualifications to be presenting
this information?
Is he or she trustworthy?
5. Clues
Check for authority of the author by asking:
Does the writer have a degree in the
subject? What are his or her affiliations
(where does the author work)?
What do others in the field think about this
person?
What else has this person written about the
topic? Is he or she an expert?
6. What?
What is the content in the
source?
Is it relevant to your topic of
study?
7. Clues
Check for relevance in:
The title
An abstract if there is one
Subject headings or table of contents if they
are present
A scan of the article
9. Clues
Check for currency by looking:
For a date in the citation if you’re
looking at a journal article in a
database
After the title or at the bottom of the
article from a website
10. Where?
Where did this information come from?
Is it cited?
Is it sponsored by an organization with a bias?
Is the information trustworthy?
11. Clues
To check for accuracy and bias, ask
Is this a controversial topic?
Is the language of this article trying to lead me to
believe something?
Is the data sound? Could another conclusion be
made based on the data? Is there data missing?
Are there many grammatical errors? Is the article
well-structured and organized?
12. Why?
For what purpose is this
information being offered?
Does the purpose match your
own?
13. Clues
To determine the purpose of a source, ask:
What vocabulary and language is used? Is it for the
general public or an expert scholar?
Is the platform of the information flashy and
exciting, or simple? Is the source trying to entertain
or inform?
Are there advertisements?
Can you see where the author is getting his or her
information? Are there citations or a works cited
list?