Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Locate Academic Sources

Consider Each Source's Credibility

Ask these questions:
Contributor/Author
·   Has the author written several articles on the topic, and do they have the credentials to be an expert in their field?
·   Can you contact them? Do they have social media profiles?
·   Have other credible individuals referenced this source or author?
·   Book: What have reviews said about it?
Publisher
·   What do you know about the publisher/sponsor? Are they well-respected?
·   Do they take responsibility for the content? Are they selective about what they publish?
·   Take a look at their other content. Do these other articles generally appear credible?
Bias
·   Does the author or the organization have a bias? Does bias make sense in relation to your argument?
·   Is the purpose of the content to inform, entertain, or to spread an agenda? Is there commercial intent?
·   Are there ads?
Currency
·   When was the source published or updated? Is there a date shown?
·   Does the publication date make sense in relation to the information presented to your argument?
·   Does the source even have a date?
Reproduced
·   Was it reproduced? If so, from where?
·   If it was reproduced, was it done so with permission? Copyright/disclaimer included?
Citations
·   Is there a bibliography or are there citations/links to related credible sources?
·   Conversely, are there credible sites or sources that refer/link to this content? In what context?
Relevance
·   Is the content relevant to your thesis statement?
·   Is the tone (academic, casual, etc.) appropriate for your project?
Accuracy
·   Is the data verifiable and accurate?
·   Are there spelling or grammatical errors? If online, are any of the links dead?
Complete
·   Is the source comprehensive?
Credible
·   Based on previous criteria, decide whether the source is credible overall.



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Essay 3 Cause/Effect Argument

Design and Development Handouts

· Know the Guidelines: Cause/Effect Argument Essay Writing—view the planning, outlining, and development handouts for the cause/effect essay.

· Sample thesis for a causal argument: this handout shows a sample cause/effect THESIS, the break-down of that THESIS, and how the essay would be structured to develop and argue the THESIS.

· Flow, Length, and Content of a Typical Body-paragraph: a specific break-down of what is expected in a well-developed body-paragraph of an argument paper.

· Need Ideas for Cause/Effect Essay??: this handout provides 'spring-board' articles and images to help you think through how you feel about the topic and possible cause/effect relationships. These are not scholarly sources. They are simply readings to help you understand different ideas surrounding the issue.