Table of Contents
What are the 5 reliable source?
What sources can be considered as credible?
- materials published within last 10 years;
- research articles written by respected and well-known authors;
- websites registered by government and educational institutions (. gov, . edu, .
- academic databases (i.e. Academic Search Premier or JSTOR);
- materials from Google Scholar.
What is the most reliable information source?
Academic journal articles are probably the most reliable source of current thinking in your field. To be the most reliable they need to be peer reviewed. This means that other academics have read them before publication and checked that they are making claims that are backed up by their evidence.
What website is a reliable source?
Look at the three letters at the end of the site’s domain name, such as “edu” (educational), “gov” (government), “org” (nonprofit), and “com” (commercial). Generally, . edu and . gov websites are credible, but beware of sites that use these suffixes in an attempt to mislead.
What are not credible sources?
Unreliable Sources = SOURCES THAT CAN BE ALTERED BY ANYONE
- Book.
- Newspapers and magazines.
- Peer reviewed journals.
- Peer reviewed articles.
- PhD or MBA dissertations and research.
- Public library.
- Scholarly articles.
Which is the best definition of a reliable source?
A reliable source is one that provides a thorough, well-reasoned theory, argument, discussion, etc. based on strong evidence. Scholarly, peer-reviewed articles or books -written by researchers for students and researchers.
Are there any reliable sources of information on the Internet?
Websites and blogs – can be reliable or unreliable, hoaxes or sincere misinformation. Researchers and other experts often use blogs as a way to share their knowledge with the general public, but anyone with computer access can do so too, to further any agenda they want. It’s up to you to evaluate the quality of what you find online.
Are there any news sources that are false?
Online news sources are particularly notorious for false information. Professor Melissa Zimdars of Merrimack College put together a document called ” False, Misleading, Clickbait-y, and/or Satirical ‘News’ Sources ” to help you read news sources with a critical eye . Wikipedia – some entries are reliable, some are not – it’s up to you to evaluate.