Sources
Sources for research and investigation:
In class we discussed the difference between a good source and a bad one. Here are some of the words the students came up with and examples to distinguish between the two.
Good source: reliable, informative, unbiased (tells both sides and sticks to facts), official, not open to the public for editing, trusted and verified.
All sources from Learn Alberta Online Reference Center are verified Learn Alberta - Online reference center
Ex: published books, textbooks, trusted newspapers (Globe and Mail), government broadcasts (CBC), journal articles, encyclopedias, trusted magazines (National Geographic) and official website (NASA).
Bad source: not trustworthy, biased, inappropriate, open to the public for editing, fake, unverified and personal.
Ex: personal blogs and websites, social media (twitter, instagram), unofficial websites, opinion articles, very dated material (depending on the topic), youtube
4
|
3
|
2
|
1
| |
Sources
|
A variety of many good sources used (4+)
All information relates to topic and research questions
Sources are found independently
|
A variety of good sources (3-4) used for information and to check other so-so sources
Most information relates to topic research questions
Sources are found independently
|
Only using 1-2 good sources
Or using a mix of bad and so-so sources
Most of the information does not relate to topic
Support is require throughout
|
All bad choices of sources (see example on blog)
Only 1 source is used
Sources don’t relate to research questions
|
Comments
Post a Comment