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Evaluating Articles


How to evaluate articles - Concordia Library

How to evaluate articles · Authority/authorship. Who is the author and what is their expertise in the subject area? · Currency/timeliness. When ...

How to evaluate journal articles and websites - University of Bath

When you find an article in an academic journal, you need to consider whether or not it is of sufficient quality and relevance to use in your work.

How To Evaluate Articles - STEM

Evaluating sources for relevancy and usefulness is one the most important steps in research. This helps researchers in the STEM disciplines to gather the ...

Evaluating Journal Articles - Harvard Guide to Using Sources

You can see if a journal is peer-reviewed either by clicking on the journal title or by looking at the front matter in the print version of the journal.

How to Evaluate an Article - Library & Research Overview

Guidelines for Evaluating an Article: Purpose of Article, Why was the article written? To, Type of Publication, For college papers, information should be ...

Evaluating Journal Articles

Evaluating Journal Articles. Refereed (or “peer reviewed”). Make sure your articles come from refereed journals. Refereed journals are scholarly publications ...

Journals - Evaluating Resources - Academic Guides

Learn how to evaluate resources, including websites, journals, and more.

How to Read a Scholarly Article - Evaluating Information

This page will focus on reading scholarly articles — published reports on original research in the social sciences, humanities, and STEM fields.

Learn to Research: Evaluating & selecting articles - Research Guides

All research articles can be classified as having a qualitative, quantitative, or mixed methods (using both methods) methodology.

Evaluating Information Sources: What Is A Peer-Reviewed Article?

The author of the article must submit it to the journal editor who forwards the article to experts in the field. Because the reviewers ...

Evaluating Your Sources: Evaluating Journal Articles

This guide's purpose is to assist students with evaluating sources and distinguishing among peer-reviewed, trade, and popular sources online and in print.

Evaluating Articles | Saint Mary's Libraries

Learn what “peer-reviewed” means and how to identify the differences between peer-reviewed, trade journal, and popular magazine articles.

Evaluating Research Articles: Home - MGH Guides

This guide is a collection of resources and activities that will help you learn how to evaluate articles efficiently and accurately.

Evaluating articles and sources - Wiki Education Dashboard

In this tutorial, we'll explore how to read Wikipedia articles, and potential sources, with a critical eye. Start. Estimated time to ...

Study Toolbox: Critically Evaluating Articles - SIT Library Guides

This toolbox includes lots of tips, tricks and information on different aspects of study from taking notes in class to preparing for exams.

Evaluating Articles - Evaluating Sources

Evaluating Articles. Magazines, journals, scholarly, popular, peer-reviewed...?? If you've ever run across any or a ...

Evaluating Articles - English 101 or 113 - Research Guides

Here are some questions you should ask yourself when you are sifting through your search results, looking for gems of information.

How to Evaluate Resources: Articles - Archer Library

Evaluating Articles · 1. Authority. Who are the authors? Does the article include the author's credentials and/or affiliations? · 2. Accuracy.

Journal & Article Evaluation - Library Guides at UChicago

Notes or citations: Scholarly articles include footnotes, endnotes, or other citations for the works quoted, consulted, and referenced in the ...

Evaluating Articles - Evaluating Sources - LTC Library - LibGuides

There is no one perfect source type. All individual sources have some sort of gap. The sources you choose should compliment eachother by filling in these gaps.