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Students will learn that reference sources can be highly reliable; yet, some can be very unreliable. This is especially true with sources found on the Internet. When evaluating sources, students should consider the following questions:
Students will learn to differentiate between primary and secondary research and sources and understand that primary sources answer the following five questions affirmatively :
Students will also learn that secondary sources respond favorably to the following five questions:
The instructor should review all material prior to teaching this lesson. In addition, instructors should ensure that students understand how to evaluate sources wisely. The instructor should review reliable and unreliable sources of information and offer examples of each. In the slide show, definitions and examples of reliable, unreliable, primary, and secondary sources are provided. Students should learn to define and discriminate between each type of source.
In order to offer this lesson, instructors need a computer and a multi-media projector.
The following materials and handouts are provided with this module:
The authors recommend that the instructor distribute the practice sheet to the students as a pre-test prior to receiving the lesson. After completing the lesson, students should answer the practice sheet again as a post-test. In this way, instructors may determine whether the students master this objective or require additional instructional support.
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