Evaluate your sources using SIFT and SCARAB Methods (Evaluating Sources, McHenry County College)
Choosing Sources for Your Assignment
When deciding on what sources to use in your research, consider:
- What is the source's purpose? Why was it created?
- Who is the author? Is it an individual or an organization? What are their credentials and their authority on the topic? Where are they situated in the world and what might be their possible biases?
- What is the source's relevance to your research? What part of your research question will it help you answer?
Purpose, author, and relevance gives you a structure for choosing sources to include in your paper and helps you think about how you're going to present your research to your audience and discuss any potential bias.
General Searching Strategies
The library databases, which include collections of articles and books, work best when you enter search terms in small bites using Keywords --rather than a whole question.
As you create a list of possible keywords, think about:
- The who, what, where, when, and why of your topic.
- Synonyms, related concepts, alternate spellings.
- General vs. specific - a more general term will get you more results than a more specific term.
You can combine keywords in a search using what are called search operators.
- Quotation marks search the phrase as a unit.
- Example: "Emmanuel College"
- AND narrows by connecting two terms. The search results must contain both terms.
- Example: "Emmanuel College" AND alumni
- OR broadens your search. The search results will contain either or both terms.
- Example: alumni OR alum
- Text will give you articles where your search term(s) show up at least once in the entire text of the article.
- Title will only give you articles with your search term in the title of the article.
- Abstract will only give you articles with your search term in the abstract (short summary at the beginning of a scholarly article).
Example search in Academic Search Premier:
- If you need only peer-reviewed articles, check that box.
- Other important filters: date, source type, subject
Other resources for finding and using scholarly articles:
- How to choose a topic
- How to differentiate between scholarly articles and peer-reviewed articles
- How to access library databases off-campus
- More on finding peer-reviewed articles
- More on finding articles using the library's databases
- Anatomy of a Scholarly Article (from North Carolina State University)
- They provide a topic overview with relevant concepts, people, places, events, dates, and vocabulary.
- Having this information will help you focus your topic and generate search terms,
Reference Books
- Credo Reference This link opens in a new window Over 700 reference books covering a variety of disciplines and including foreign language dictionaries. Includes a concept map, which provides related subjects and noted personalities to assist beginning research.
- Gale Virtual Reference Library This link opens in a new window A database of encyclopedias and specialized reference resources for multidisciplinary research, including: fashion, film and filmmakers, pop culture, and multicultural issues. Includes the six-volume Beachams Guide to the Endangered Species of North America.
- Gale In Context: Opposing Viewpoints This link opens in a new window Covers timely issues, from capital punishment to immigration to marijuana. This cross-curricular resource supports science, social studies, current events, and language arts classes. Informed, differing views help learners develop critical-thinking skills and draw their own conclusions.
News Sources (See further resources on the Newspapers guide)
- Boston Globe (1980 - present) This link opens in a new windowBrowse by issue [Content is updated daily by 8 a.m.]:
- New York Times - Academic Pass This link opens in a new windowUse the TimesMachine site to explore over 150 years of Times journalism, as it originally appeared.
- Washington Post (1996-present) This link opens in a new window
- ProQuest US Newsstream This link opens in a new windowNational and local newspapers, newswires, blogs, and news sites' transcripts including U.S. major dailies, CNN, Meet the Press and hundred's more. Current coverage and back files will vary.
- Apply for a BPL eCardUse the BPL eCard for access to the Wall Street Journal, and many more
Tips for using books in your research:
- Set a reading purpose so you know exactly what you want to gain by reading parts of the book.
- Read the Table of Contents to identify sections to read.
- Skim the Index for keywords related to your topic.
- Read the book Introduction and Conclusion first. Also, explore the conclusions of individual chapters of interest.
- ProQuest Ebook Central This link opens in a new windowNote: AND, OR, NOT must be entered in all uppercase.
- Academic (Scholarly) Journal: A type of periodical with articles written by experts in a field whose purpose is to advance understanding in that field.
- Database: A searchable collection of journals or their citations.
- Peer-review articles: Articles that are screened by experts in the field prior to being published.
Note: Not all scholarly articles go through the peer-reviewed process.
Article Databases - Multidisciplinary
Multidisciplinary databases are a good place to start since they have content in many different fields/disciplines.
- Tips for Searching in the Databases
- Academic Search Premier This link opens in a new windowSee a sample search in Academic Search Premier.
- JSTOR This link opens in a new windowSince results may contain articles that are not peer reviewed, search for the journal title using the A-Z Journals by Title list to verify the journal's peer-reviewed status.
- Google Scholar This link opens in a new window
- Click on the Full-Text@Emmanuel at the right of articles or the more option below the item record.
- Search for the journal title using the A-Z Journals by Title list to verify the journals peer-reviewed status.
Selected Subject-Specific Databases
Subject-specific databases focus on one field/discipline. To find others, visit the A-Z List of Databases or find databases on a specific Subject Guide.
- Education Full Text This link opens in a new window Education Full Text provides more than 360 journals full-text online. It indexes a total of more than 770 English-language periodicals, yearbooks, education-related books published after 1983. Full-text coverage begins in January 1996.
- SocINDEX with Full Text This link opens in a new window This index features more than 2.1 million records with subject headings from a more than 20,000 term sociology-specific thesaurus designed by expert lexicographers. SocINDEX with Full Text contains full text for more than 860 journals dating back to 1908. This database also includes full text for more than 830 books and monographs, and full text for over 16,800 conference papers. Use Academic Search Premier and click on Choose Databases (above the search boxes) to search SocINDEX with Full Text along with other Ebsco Databases.
- Science Direct This link opens in a new window Access to full text of over 2,500 scholarly, peer-reviewed journals in the areas of: Biochemistry; Business and Management; Genetics and Molecular Biology; Chemistry; Immunology and Microbiology; Medicine; Psychology; and Social Science. Includes recently-accepted articles in press. Note: AND, OR, NOT must be entered in all uppercase. (See further details.)
Why cite?
- Helps others recreate and understand your research process. Someone reading your paper can retrieve the sources you used to build your argument.
- Situates your work inside a scholarly conversation about your topic. Current research builds on past research, and future research builds on current and past research! Citation lets us follow how scholarship develops over time.
- It gives credit to other's work.
- It is required in order to maintain academic integrity/avoid plagiarism.
Style Guides
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APA Citation Style
by Diane Zydlewski Last Updated Mar 21, 2025 200 views this year
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MLA Citation Style
by Diane Zydlewski Last Updated Mar 21, 2025 49 views this year
Citation Generators
Note: You are still responsible for your citations even when using a citation manager. Always verify your citations are accurate.
- ZoteroBibFor scholarly articles, enter the title or DOI. For websites or news articles, enter the URL. For books, enter the ISBN.
Citation Managers
A great way to keep organized. Citation managers allow you to easily gather, organize, store, and share sources and to instantly generate citations and bibliographies.
Note: You are still responsible for your citations even when using a citation manage
- Zotero"Zotero is a free, easy-to-use tool to help you collect, organize, annotate, cite, and share research."
- See also - How to Download and Use Zotero
Information has value. As you gather resources, you may consider some of the following strategies to determine if your information is real.
SIFT
SIFT was created by Mike Caulfield. There are four parts to it:
- S-Stop
- I-Investigate the source
- F-Find better coverage
- T- Trace claims
Caulfield M.(2019, June 19).SIFT- The Four Moves. https://hapgood.us/2019/06/19/sift-the-four-moves/.
Licensed under the CC by 4.0.
Lateral Reading
Lateral Reading is another strategy. It encourages you to evaluate claims through research.