When you encounter any kind of source, consider:
Authority
Purpose
Publication & format
Relevance
Date of Publication
Documentation
SOURCE: Content by UC Berkeley Library via Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 License. Accessed on 10/14/2021.
To find out more about an author:
Google the author's name or dig deeper in the library's biographical source databases.
To find scholarly sources:
When searching library article databases, look for a checkbox to narrow your results to Scholarly, Peer Reviewed or Peer Refereed publications.
To evaluate a source's critical reception:
Check in FrogScholar to get a sense of how a source was received in the popular and scholarly press.
To evaluate internet sources:
The internet is a great place to find both scholarly and popular sources, but it's especially important to ask questions about authorship and publication when you're evaluating online resources. If it's unclear who exactly created or published certain works online, look for About pages on the site for more information, or search for exact quotations from the text in Google (using quotation marks) to see if you can find other places where the work has been published.