1. Evaluating A Website
Can you trust the Web pages that you find on the Internet?
Are they appropriate resources for your research paper?
Here are some tips on how to evaluate a web page:
| Criteria | Questions to Ask | Where to look for the answers |
|---|---|---|
| 1. AUTHORITY / RESPONSIBILITY | Who is the author of the page? Is it an individual or a group? What are the author's qualifications to speak on this issue? | Look for authorship, responsible party information in:
|
| 2. PURPOSE | How would you describe the content of the page? What is the purpose of the page? (To entertain? To inform? To persuade? To deceive?) | Read "About." links or look for mission statements to determine the purpose of the site. |
| 3. CURRENCY | When was the page last updated? Do the links work? | Look for evidence of currency by checking the footer for last update. |
| 4. OBJECTIVITY | How objectively is the content presented? Is more than one side given? |
|
| 5. ACCURACY | Are there any misspellings or errors on the page? | Examine the body of the page for
|
| 6. APPROPRIATENESS | Would this page be an appropriate source for a research paper? Why or why not? | Do your answers to the questions above add up to a good source? |
2. Popular Or Scholarly -- How Can I Tell?
The basic differences between popular and scholarly articles arise from the audience for which the periodical is written.
| Criteria | Popular Magazines | Scholarly Journals |
|---|---|---|
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|
| Audience |
general public | scholars, students, professionals |
| Appearance |
lots of color, advertising, illustrations, short articles | mostly text, black & white, graphs & charts, long articles with bibliographies & footnotes |
| Content |
feature articles on timely topics; written for a general audience in a language that is easy to understand | researched and footnoted articles; written for a specialized audience in a vocabulary that is not easily understood by the average reader |
| Author(ity) |
written by staff & freelance writers; checked by editors | authored by researchers, academics, specialists; peer-reviewed |
| Examples |
Time; Business Week; People | The Journal of American History; Signs |
Where can I find scholarly articles? Use an index or online database to locate several articles on a topic.
- STARTING POINTS: EBSCOHost's Academic Search Premier is a general periodical databases, will provide some full-text scholarly articles as well as citations to others that are not full-text. An option for limiting the search to scholarly/peer-reviewed articles is available in each database.
- FOLLOW UP with a specialized database that covers the topic area. Most specialized databases contain citations and occasionally full-text articles that are primarily from scholarly publications. For assistance with selecting an appropriate specialized database, consult a librarian at the Reference Desk.


