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Reading and Writing Successfully in College: Evaluating Sources

Reading and Writing Successfully in College
Evaluating Sources
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Table Of Contents
  5. Welcome, Students!
  6. Welcome, Instructors!
  7. Acknowledgements
  8. Land Acknowledgement
  9. Icons, Textboxes, and Images
  10. Doing Intellectual Work
    1. What Is Intellectual Work?
    2. Understanding Bloom’s Taxonomy
    3. Bloom's and Generative AI
    4. Understanding Writing Assignments as Intellectual Work
    5. Examining Sample Assignment 1: Summary and Analysis
    6. Examining Sample Assignment 2: Position Paper
    7. Examining Sample Assignment 3: Article for a Public Audience
    8. Examining Sample Assignment 4: Reflection
    9. Treating Complex Tasks as Intellectual Work: Why?
  11. Successful College Reading
    1. Why Reading in a College Writing Textbook?
    2. Reading Effectively
    3. Creating an Optimal Setting for Reading
    4. Examining a Sample Assignment
    5. Using Pre-Reading Strategies
    6. Focusing Your Reading
    7. Annotating and Note-Taking
    8. Doing Quick Research
    9. Finding the Main Point
    10. Working Carefully Through Trouble Spots
    11. Rereading
    12. Responding to What You Are Reading
    13. Summarizing and Reflecting on a Text
    14. Reading in College and Elsewhere
  12. Writing Process in College
    1. Why Writing Process in College?
    2. Thinking about Writing Process
    3. Prewriting 1: Understanding the Task
    4. Prewriting 2: Generating Ideas
    5. Drafting 1: Setting Up Your Structure
    6. Drafting 2: Producing Text
    7. Getting Feedback
    8. Revising 1: Revising Globally
    9. Revising 2: Revising Paragraphs
    10. Editing
    11. Proofreading
    12. Owning Your Process
  13. Writing with Sources
    1. How Are Sources Used in College?
    2. Understanding Sources Types
    3. Finding Sources
    4. Evaluating Sources
    5. Summarizing
    6. Paraphrasing
    7. Quoting
    8. Choosing Between Quotations and Paraphrases
    9. Citing Your Sources
    10. Plagiarizing
    11. Integrating Source Material with Your Ideas
    12. Thoughtful Source Use
  14. Glossary
  15. Works Cited
  16. Grant Information
  17. Version History

Evaluating Sources

Sometimes, the first source that shows up on our search results is great. It’s relevant and recent, and it’s written by someone who really knows what they are talking about. Much more often, however, the first source is not actually reliable. And sometimes it can be hard to tell.

Part of being a critical thinker is learning to evaluate your sources. Arguments built on lousy sources won’t hold up, so you need to know if you are using sources that are reliable. It’s not enough to find a source that addresses your topic. It has to be a good source.

So how can you tell the difference between a good source and a not-so-good source?

You may have heard of the CRAAP test for evaluating sources: Currency, Reliability, Authority, Accuracy, and Purpose. This system, developed by Molly Beestrum, asks you to look at how recent your source is (and how much that matters), whether the source is too one-sided or lacking sources of its own, who the author is and what their credentials are, and what the source is trying to accomplish. These are all excellent areas for investigation. Here’s a quick video explaining the process:

One or more interactive elements has been excluded from this version of the text. You can view them online here: https://rotel.pressbooks.pub/readwritesuccess/?p=136#oembed-1

This system is really useful, but I recommend rearranging the order. I treat “authority” as the most important criterion for determining the credibility of a source. If the source doesn’t have authority, move on to another source. If the information is sound, another source with more authority will also discuss those ideas. And if you only find the ideas in one source, consider that a red flag.

Here are some of the red flags to look for:

  • Authority
    • You cannot find an author and the organization is questionable.
    • The author has experience or credentials, but their credentials aren’t relevant to the material they are writing about.
    • The site is a .com or .net, and seems to be more focused on selling you something than on providing accurate information.
  • Currency
    • The site was published before recent events relevant to your topic.
    • The site has not been updated in recent years, which may mean you are looking at an unmaintained and out-of-date site.
    • The sources used by the site are too old for your topic.
  • Relevance/Intended Audience
    • The information isn’t really related to your topic, even if the information itself seems good.
    • The information is presented in a simplistic way or ignores complexities that you know exist.
    • The site is written for children or adolescents and may be oversimplifying the information in ways that aren’t appropriate for college-level work.
  • Accuracy
    • You can only find the information in this one source.
    • The site doesn’t have any links to outside sources or citations.
    • The site has links, but the links only go to pages on the same site or the same few sites.
    • When you check the sources, they don’t seem to be saying what the site says they do.
  • Purpose/Objectivity
    • The site has an identifiable conflict of interest. In particular, examine any advertising on the site. Would the revenue stream interfere with objectivity and balance in the presentation of information?
    • The site is trying to make people angry or arouse other strong emotions.
    • The site provides arguments on only one side of an issue or presents opposing arguments unfairly or in too simplistic a fashion.
Activity: Evaluating a Source

Use the questions below to help you evaluate one of the sources you are considering using. Try writing out the answers, even if your instructor doesn’t require it.

Step 1: Provide Source Information

View the instructions.

If your instructor is collecting this, be sure to start your evaluation with the title of the page you are evaluating and the URL. Even if the evaluation is only for yourself, it will help to note which source you are evaluating.

Step 2: Do the Evaluation

View the instructions.

Answer the following questions about the site:

Authority

  • Who is the author and what are his/her/their credentials?
  • Are those credentials verifiable?
  • Can you contact the author?
  • What organization is sponsoring the site?
  • What kind of domain is it (.com, .org, .edu, .gov)?

Currency

  • Is there a date on the page?
  • How recently has the site been updated?
  • How up-to-date is the information?

Relevance/Intended Audience

  • How is the site relevant for your project?
  • Who is the target audience?
  • Is the information presented at an appropriate level of complexity for your purposes?

Accuracy

  • Does the author provide complete citations for sources or links to reliable information on other sites?
  • If so, look at one of those sources. Where is it? Does it say what the author says it says?
  • Can you find another source that presents some of the same information?

Purpose/Objectivity

  • What is the purpose of the page?
  • How objective or biased is the author’s position?
  • If there is bias, does the bias get in the way of a clear and fair position?
  • What alternative viewpoints does the author present, and are they treated fairly?
  • Is there any identifiable conflict of interest?
  • What’s the relationship between the content and the advertising (if any)?

You may not be able to answer all the questions, but you should be able to answer enough to come to a conclusion for each section about how credible that aspect of the site is.

Step 3: Take a Step Back

View the instructions.

After you have answered these questions, write a general statement about how credible you think the source is and why.

This may seem like a long and tedious process, but after you practice this for a while, you will get much better at quickly determining whether a site is trustworthy or not. I can evaluate about 95% of all sites I see as reputable or not in less than a minute. You can get this quick, too.

Key Points: Evaluating Sources

  • Evaluate sources using five criteria: authority, currency, relevance/intended audience, accuracy, and purpose/objectivity.
  • If a source’s authority is in question, pass it by. If the information is good, you’ll find it elsewhere.
  • Many internet sources will have weaknesses in some of these categories, but using all of the categories will help you locate the most reputable sources.
  • If you practice this kind of evaluation, you will be able to do it quickly.


Media Attribution

“Evaluation” by Mike Cohen, Flickr is licensed under CC BY 2.0

“Evaluating Sources” by Western Libraries is used under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license.

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Reading and Writing Successfully in College: A Guide for Students [Revised Edition] Copyright © 2024 by Patricia Lynne is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.
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