Evaluating Websites Because there is no review process or regulation for the public Web, you will need to judge for yourself the quality of the material you find. Keep in mind these questions: |
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Accuracy | Does the information presented seem accurate? Are the facts verifiable? |
Authority | Who is the author? What expertise does he or she have on this topic? Who sponsors the site? Check the domain name to see if it is a university, business, organization, or an individual. |
Objectivity | What is the stated purpose of the site? Check the "About..." link if there is one. What position or opinion is presented and does it seem biased? What kind of sites does this one link to? |
Currency | On what date was the page created? Do you need more current information? Do links on the site still connect to their destination? |
Use | Would you quote information from this site in a college research paper? |
Searching by Domain Extensions Via Google Advanced
This library guide provides many, many excellent librarian-selected websites as resources (along with database articles and books) for your assignment. However, if you want to search for more websites, we recommend conducting an advanced search using more credible domain extensions:
Extension | Type | Example |
.gov | government | www.senate.gov |
.edu | education | www.ccac.edu |
.org | organization | www.neabigread.org |
.mil | military | www.carlisle.army.mil |
You can select your domain extension when conducting a search in Google Advanced: www.google.com/advanced_search. You can type in your search terms/keywords in the search box, then type in your extension in the site or domain box, then click search.