Transcript Document

Information Needs to be Evaluated
In academic research and in everyday
life, you cannot always trust what
you read. Information (both in print
and online) can be misleading.
The ability to evaluate information
according to authority, accuracy,
currency, and purpose or objective
helps you to understand the content
and select sources that are
appropriate for your assignments.
This tutorial is designed to enable
you to better evaluate information
sources.
Evaluation Criteria: Authority
Authority__
Accuracy__
Coverage__
Currency__
Objectivity_
Is it clear who the
author or publisher is?
Is there information
about the author’s
qualifications?
Authority refers to possession of knowledge or experience in a specific field that qualifies a
person to present information or opinion considered expert and reliable.
Evaluation Criteria: Accuracy
Are the sources for
factual information
given so they can be
verified?
Do you see any
blatant errors?
Authority__
Accuracy__
Coverage__
Currency__
Objectivity_
Information is accurate if it is free from mistakes or errors. Some indicators of probable
accuracy are agreement with other sources focused on the same subject, inclusion of citations
or references to the sources used to create the information, and reviewed by other subject
matter experts.
Evaluation Criteria: Coverage
Authority__
Accuracy__
Coverage__
Currency__
Objectivity_
Does it provide an
in-depth review of
the topic or is it a
superficial overview
with broad, general
statements?
Coverage looks at how well a subject is covered. Is the article in depth or just a surface review?
Both can be useful in different settings, so it is important to determine which you require for
your assignment.
Evaluation Criteria: Currency
Authority__
Accuracy__
Coverage__
Is the site up to date
and current?
Is there a copyright
date?
Currency__
Objectivity_
When was it last
revised?
Information is current if it is accurate at the present time as opposed to some earlier time. The
ability to analyze information according to this criterion is important for assignment or topic
questions that require current information.
Evaluation Criteria: Objectivity
Is the material
factual, unbiased,
and in depth?
Authority__
Accuracy__
Coverage__
Do you detect any
kind of “spin”?
Currency__
Objectivity_
Information that is accurate may be misleading if its author presents partial information related to the topic, opinions
disguised as facts or information gleaned from a flawed research study. Objective information sources enable you to
formulate your own conclusions about research topics and meet your professor’s assignment requirements. A work whose
author strives to inform, rather than persuade, makes clear distinctions between fact and opinion, presents multiple
perspectives, and is not paid by a commercial organization. These are more likely to be objective.
Evaluate Your Sources!
Say, for example, that you are evaluating this article. You look at the article and notice that it
has no graphs or data tables. Can you assume anything about its reliability from this alone? No
you cannot.
Evaluate Your Sources!
For this article, determine the authority. Who wrote the article or who published it? Is it a
reliable publisher and does the author have the educational background needed to write about
the subject?
Evaluate Your Sources!
Is it accurate? Do you see citations and references where you can verify the information?
Evaluate Your Sources!
And finally, is it current and objective?
In this case, “Yes!” The article is definitely reliable and fits each of the criteria.
Evaluating Information
You should now be
able to evaluate the
reliability and
credibility of a
source for better,
and more effective
research.
Authority__
Accuracy__
Coverage__
Currency__
Objectivity_
Now that you know how to evaluate a resource, you are ready to excel in your research. Just
remember the criteria and you will be ready to go. And remember, if you ever have any
questions about a source, your librarians are always ready to help.
Congratulations!
Now that you have viewed the Evaluating Information tutorial,
click on the button below to complete the Evaluating
Information Activity.
If you need help, please contact a reference librarian by either calling
(580) 581-2957 or emailing [email protected]