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In this day and age, there are limitless places to find information, but reliable and credible information, can sometimes be elusive. To help you sort through it all, see our list of the many different types of sources and a short video on peer review sources below.
Pro:
Con:
Intended Audience: Scholars, researchers, professionals, and university students in particular field
Watch for: "Predatory" or "pay to publish" online journals
Pro:
Con:
Intended Audience: Professional organizations or professionals/scholars with similar interests
What For / Consider: Has characteristics in common with both popular magazines and scholarly journals
Pro:
Con:
Intended Audience: Varies (general audience through scholars)
What For / Consider: Information may be dated due to the time it takes to publish a book.
Pro:
Con:
Intended Audience: General audience or those with a specific, recreational interest (e.g. sports, fashion, science, etc.)
What For / Consider: Potential editorial bias
Pro:
Con:
Intended Audience: General audience
What For / Consider: Contains both fact-based reporting and editorial content (opinions). Opinions may be biased.
Pro:
Con:
Intended Audience: General audience
What For / Consider: Governmental and educational websites have higher credibility than commercial websites
Pro:
Con:
Intended Audience: General audience
What For / Consider: Use the reference list to find other sources that can used
Pro:
Con:
Intended Audience: General audience through scholars depending on the source
What For / Consider: High potential for bias. Usually informal.
This video is licensed from Common Craft.
This work was adapted from Northwest Arkansas Community College, Pauline Whitaker Library, licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.