how do you know it’s the real thing? evaluating websites

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How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

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Page 1: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing?

Evaluating Websites

Page 2: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Reality Check

Page 3: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Know Your Personal Biases

Do I usually base my opinions on. . .

Do I tend to look at things as either “right/wrong” or “good/bad”?

Page 4: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

When I receive information, I usually. . .

_____assume the author has the qualifications.

_____verify the author’s claims/facts in another source.

_____accept that the information is probably true.

Page 5: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites
Page 6: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

What Is a Reliable Website?

Page 7: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

An authoritative, accurate source whose claims can be verified by reliable documents.

Page 8: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

• author’s credibility

• source’s reputation

An Authoritative source depends on:

Page 9: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

How do I evaluate the author’s credibility?

Ask questions!

Page 10: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Why do I have free access to this site?

Why do the creators want me to see this site?

Page 11: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Is the site attempting to sell. . . .

a product?

promote an idea?

advocate a political agenda?

Page 12: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Who’s Behind the Website?

Who pays for the site?

Who maintains the site?

Who is the content provider?

Page 13: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Check to see if site provides an identifying link:

“About Us”

“Who We Are”

“Mission Statement”

Example: http://www.aclu.org

Page 14: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Author’s Credibility

Check credentials of author:

Listed in library databases?

Academic Search Elite

Discussed on the Internet?

Google the author’s name

Page 15: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Identify the Author/Sponsor

Personal Home Pages

http://www.u.arizona.edu/~bittnera/

Truncate the URL to the domain name:

www.csub.edu/BAS/fiscal/studaccount/cashiering.shtml

Page 16: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

The Reputation of Sources

Page 17: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Does the source provide editorial oversight?

Ensures quality control.

Page 18: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Does the source provider employ fact checkers?

Page 19: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Fact checkers check quotes, dates, names, statistics, citations, and other represented facts.

Fact checkers check the legitimacy, authenticity, and validity of the information at hand.

Page 20: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Scholarly fact checkers are called “peer-reviewers.”

Page 21: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Media Watchdogs

www.factcheck.org/

Page 22: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Examples of inaccurate content.

Page 23: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

In 2005, according to Ebreastaug.com, Americans spent $12 billion on cosmetic surgery.

Page 24: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Supported Statements

Sarwer, D. “Physical Appearance & Cosmetic Medical Treatments: Socio-Cultural Influences.”Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology

2 (2006): 29-39. (33)

Page 25: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Supported Statements

“In 2005, Americans spent approximately $8 billion on surgeons’ fees for cosmetic medical treatments (ASAPS, 2006).”

Page 26: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Supported Statements

References

American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery. Cosmetic Surgery National Data Bank—2005

Statistics. New York, NY: ASAPS, 2006.

Page 27: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Top Domains

•Personal (.com, .edu, .net)

•Commercial (.com, .org)

•Advocacy (.org, .com)

•Non-profits (.org, .edu)

•Scholarly/educational (.edu, org)

•Popular press (.com, .org)

•Proprietary (.com, .edu, .org, .net)

•Governmental (.gov, .mil)

Page 28: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Summary

• Why was this site launched?

• Who is behind this site?

• Is the content cited by reliable evidence?

Page 29: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Don’t accept claims at face value.

Test them by asking questions.

Page 30: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Who is speaking?

Where are they getting their information?

How can I verify what they’re saying?

Page 31: How Do You Know It’s the Real Thing? Evaluating Websites

Summary

• is qualified to address the issue.

• supports claims with evidence.

• confirms the accuracy of a statistic or fact.

Trusting a website is based on whether the author: