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Digital and Media Literacy: Evaluate Your Sources

Evaluate Your Sources

Evaluate your sources

As you do your research, it may be difficult to find the sources that best fit, so it is important to evaluate your sources based on your information needs.  Sometimes you will need a source with the most current up-to-date information available, and other times you will not.  Or you may need to evaluate your need for an objective versus bias perspective.

Examine the source and ask yourself these 4 questions:

  • What are you looking for?
  • Is this information up-to-date?
  • Who is providing this information?
  • What is the purpose?

The interactive quiz below will help you evaluate any source, but is best suited for website evaluations.

Evaluate Your Sources: Interactive Quiz

Read Laterally

But also read laterally, for a more thorough evaluation: 

Look beyond the original source to investigate claims, authors, and organizations. 

Open a new tab on your browser

  • Google the name of the organization or author in question
  • Did anything come up of interest?
  • Any red flags?
  • Do a quick Wikipedia search.
  • Or check claims against other fact-checking resources. 

Wikipedia

Note about Wikipedia and Social Media

Social media sites and Wikipedia are often painted as the boogeyman of research, but it is not all bad.

Because Wikipedia is sourced by anonymous editors, it can not be used as a source. And social media credentials may not be easily verifiable. BUT They can be used as a tool.

Use them as a tool to

  • Get a better understanding of a concept of topic. You might be able to collect key terms or concepts that you can use/verify in your research.
  • Use the citations! Wikipedia articles often link to other sources. Use the links at the bottom of an article to find more credible sources.

Research Footer

Citation Tutorials
Keyword Generator
Website Evaluation
Username and Passwords
Book recs and research help