EVALUATING WEB SITES AND SOURCES. Knowledge is Empowerment Today’s objective is to learn how to be critical with each resource you use in your literature.

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Presentation transcript:

EVALUATING WEB SITES AND SOURCES

Knowledge is Empowerment Today’s objective is to learn how to be critical with each resource you use in your literature review. The web is full of academic information; you only need to learn how to find it. It is important to know how to evaluate the information you want to cite. We will start with the evaluation of web pages/ sites and continue with evaluation of sources.

Knowledge is Empowerment Evaluation web pages/ sites: Start with looking at the URL domain, (between and the first /) Is it a personal page? Does it have a personal name following by a tilde, a percent sign, or words like “people”, “users” or “members”? Is the server a commercial ISP like aol.com or geocities.com? Is the domain a government site? “.gov”, “.mil”? or

Knowledge is Empowerment Important issues while looking at the domain: Is the domain educational? “.edu” or nonprofit organization “.org” Is the domain commercial? “.com” Is the country code from the country you are looking for “.us”, “.ca”, “.uk”?

Knowledge is Empowerment Examples of who is the “publisher” or agency or person operating the “server”, (between and the first /): content/standards/standards.pdf arships/Scholarships/ These internet sites can help you:

Knowledge is Empowerment You also need to learn how to identify the University acronyms usuniversity.edu (United States University) ucsd.edu (University of California in San Diego) You will find that for documents published within United States, the Country is not mentioned: –digitalcommons.calpoly.edu –minds.wisconsin.edu –docs.lib.purdue.edu –deepblue.lib.umich.edu

Knowledge is Empowerment “.edu” stands for Universities in United States, for the rest of the world, you need to learn the acronyms For example, “ca” for Canada, “mx” for Mexico, “es” for Spain, “au” for Australia or “uk” for United Kingdom. –usir.salford.ac.uk –discovery.ucl.ac.uk –eprints.qut.edu.au –fcm.ens.uabc.mx These sites can help you:

Knowledge is Empowerment Narrow your results by domain: If searching Google – Advanced Search, you can also narrow your results by Site or domain. For example search Google advance search “web site evaluation” and limit the domain to site:.edu Or limit your results to a domain like.org or.gov

Knowledge is Empowerment Look for the background of the site, truncate back the URL i.e. delete the end characters of the URL stopping just before each /. Press enter and checked. You will find interesting information or none. – arships.aspx – –

Knowledge is Empowerment Find out who is the author or the responsible body. Google is a good source. Search Google Blog Search and learn what they say about the web site. Caution: do not use the information if there is no confirmation about the author nor page update. You need to question everything you find in the web critically. Where did the author retrieve the information? Are they reliable sources? Well-developed pages include links to other pages with opposite point of view Do the links work?

Knowledge is Empowerment Check in alexa.com what are the web pages link to this particular page Copy and paste or type the URL you are evaluating, click search and click on the “get details” button: –Find out the traffic of the web page –Ownership information –Related link to other sites who visited the page –Sites linking to the web page –See also Wayback machine for old pages

Knowledge is Empowerment Evaluating Information sources. Remember the five W’s: Who, What, When, Where and Why You will need to ask these questions, whether is printed or online, if it is a book, an image or article from a journal, newspaper, a website or any source you want to cite. –Authority –Timeliness –Accuracy –Coverage

Knowledge is Empowerment Authority: Is there an author? What is the author’s affiliation? Does the author have produce more works? Are these works cited? Can you contact the author? Is the domain education “.edu” in the URL, or “.com” (commercial) or “.gov”(Government)? Is there a tilde (~) in the URL? This may indicate a personal web directory

Knowledge is Empowerment Timeliness: Is there a date when the research started or the document created? Or revised, edited or updated? If it is a web site, when was the last time was updated? Note: Scroll down at the end of the page, and look for the date, the page was last modified.

Knowledge is Empowerment Accuracy: Is the source in a peer-reviewed publication or journal? If not can you verified the factual information or who is responsible for the information? If it contains graphs, charts or images, are the sources clear?

Knowledge is Empowerment Coverage: Is the content relevant to your research? Includes conclusions? and are they based on evidence? Is the information scholarly? For online sources from a web site, is the document complete?

Knowledge is Empowerment For more information see: San Diego State University information-sources/ University of British Columbia. Cornell University Library Berkeley Libraries

Knowledge is Empowerment Thank you for taking the time to learn! It is my pleasure to help you Please contact me at: M.L.S Catalina Lopez du (619) ext. 2017