How can you use the Internet as a tool for credible research and information gathering?
Research Using the Internet
- Don’t rely exclusively on Net resources.
- Narrow your research topic before logging on.
- Know your subject directories and search engines.
- Keep a detailed record of sites you visit and the sites you use.
- Double-check all URLs that you put in your paper.
How do you know if information on the Internet is credible?
How to Find Reliable Information on the Internet
- Can you find reliable information on the internet? Finding reliable information on the internet can be a challenge.
- Search on Google Scholar.
- Check the author credentials.
- Look at statistics.
- Evaluate the website itself.
- Check what they are selling.
- Go to primary sources.
- The bottom line.
Which is the most reliable source of information?
Academic journal articles are probably the most reliable source of current thinking in your field. To be the most reliable they need to be peer reviewed. This means that other academics have read them before publication and checked that they are making claims that are backed up by their evidence.
How do you analyze the usefulness of a source?
Source interpretation: written sources
- Identify the source. Is it primary or secondary?
- Put it in its context.
- Consider the author and their purpose.
- Evaluate the information.
- Identify the source.
- Put it in its context.
- Consider the artist/creator and their purpose.
- Evaluate the information.
What does it mean to Analyse a source?
Analysis is the ability to demonstrate an understanding of the elements that contributed to the creation of a historical source. It answers the question: ‘Why does this source exist in its current form?’
How do you write a source analysis?
Let’s jump in!
- Step 1: Figure out what the question is askingStep 2: Use an analysis checklist.
- Step 3: Determine the origin of the source.
- Step 4: Determine the motive behind the source.
- Step 5: Consider what content is presented in the source.
- Step 6: Consider the intended audience of the source.
How do you write an introduction for a source analysis?
- ANALYZE THE SOURCE/QUOTE: EXPLAIN ITS’ MEANING… BRING IN EXACT WORDS and how it. reflects that perspective.
- Topic sentence: This sentence should introduce the reason/argument is general way. REFER BACK TO THE SOURCE. Explain the reason/argument: fully explain the “WHY”