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RELIABLE SOURCES Please follow along in your notes!

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Presentation on theme: "RELIABLE SOURCES Please follow along in your notes!"— Presentation transcript:

1 RELIABLE SOURCES Please follow along in your notes!

2 SOURCE A place that you find information– can be an article, movie, book, video, interview, lecture, study, etc. KEEP TRACK OF YOUR SOURCES AS YOU RESEARCH

3 RELIABLE OR CREDIBLE SOURCE A reliable, accurate, trustworthy source of information - Look for a clear author who is an authority on the topic and is writing to inform

4 UNRELIABLE SOURCE A source that you cannot trust to give you true or fair information- May not have an author, may be crowdsourced, may be focused on defending their opinion, be inaccurate, etc.

5 CROWDSOURCE To get information by getting many people to contribute their knowledge and opinions, usually through the internet; crowdsourced sources are not generally reliable

6 WIKI A website that many people (often everyone online) can add to or change; not generally reliable sources; Wikipedia is one example

7 Thinking Questions! ◦ You can’t use a crowdsourced webpage like Wikis, debate.org, about.com, and Yahoo Answers for a source. Still, how can you use them to make your research easier?

8 BIASED Prejudiced in support of or against a position A biased site may not give a fair representation of the facts on a topic. Example : A cigarette company telling you about how cigarettes affect your heart and overall health.

9 UNBIASED Giving a fair representation of the facts; Usually not supporting a position in favor or against something An unbiased site is a helpful source. Example: The American Heart Association presenting facts about how smoking affects your heart and overall health.

10 Thinking Questions! ◦ Why is it important to find unbiased sources, even if the source you found agrees with you?

11 URL The full web address of a website. You need to click on the “search”/”URL” bar on an iPad to see the whole thing.

12 .EDU A suffix to a website that tells you that site belongs to an educational institution, like a college or high school- Usually reliable, but be sure that you’re looking at an institutional page or professor’s page.

13 .ORG A suffix to a website that tells you that site belongs to an organization, like the American Heart Association- Bigger groups are often reliable, but be watchful for bias, since organizations usually have a cause.

14 .COM OR.BIZ A suffix to a website that tells you that site is commercial- it belongs to a company, like a Wrigley gum or Nikes shoes, and you should be aware of possible bias.

15 .NET A suffix to a website that tells you that site is part of a network of some kind, which really tells you very little- be watchful for bias

16 .GOV A suffix to a website that tells you that site belongs to a government institution, like the Department of Education or the Center for Disease Control- usually reliable

17 Thinking Questions! ◦ Which of the URL suffixes that we talked about would be most likely to contain reliable sources? Which would be least likely to contain reliable sources? Explain.

18 CITATION A Way to Give Credit to Your Sources and Tell Your Readers Where You Got Your Information

19 IN-TEXT CITATION A way to give credit to a source for a particular quote or piece of information; tells the reader which bibliographic citation to look at to find the source. Keep track of what information comes from what source. Example in bold : Contrary to what you may have heard, gum that you swallow usually only stays in your system for less than a week (Matson).

20 Thinking Questions! ◦ What do you need to keep track of to do your in-text citations?

21 BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION A way to tell your reader how to find the source you used in your work; Goes in your Bibliography; The format is different depending on the type of source ; save the URL or the article and webpage title so you can find it later. Example for an Online Article: Matson, John. “Fact or Fiction?: Chewing Gum Takes Seven Years to Digest.” Scientific American. Nature America, Inc., 11 October 2007. Web. 8 February 2016.

22 Thinking Questions! ◦ What do you need to keep track of for your bibliography?


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