Evaluating Internet Sources"The Web is an electronic repository for books, data collections, encyclopedias, libraries, and any disparate piece of text, graphic, or sound byte that someone chose to put on-line. And some of it is inaccurate, biased, out-of-date, shallow, and inappropriate for academic use." Lida Larsen--Information Literacy. Ask These QuestionsAuthorityWho is the author of the page? Can you identify their qualifications for providing this information? AccuracyAre the sources of factual information easy to verify? Is the information itself verifiable from another source? ObjectivityAre there biases of opinion in the material, and are they clearly stated? CurrencyAre there dates on the page that indicate when the page was written? Are there some indications that the information is kept current or has the page been abandoned? CoverageHow complete is the information on the page? Is the treatment superficial and broad, or in-depth? Are there links to other information sources from this page? Other ConsiderationsPermanence--is the information likely to STAY up for a reasonable amount of time? Internet Evaluation ResourcesThinking Critically About World Wide Web Resources. Evaluating Information on the Internet Selected Resources http://www.marquette.edu/library/search/evaluatingweb.html
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