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Internet Research Evaluating Information People are seeking information • Statistics show steady increases each year in the number of people using the Internet to seek information. • They seek information on hugely important subjects, from health to voting to investing their money. People are making decisions • People then are using that information to make decisions. • They are making decisions about vacations, health, work, travel, voting and other subjects -- all based on what they find on the Internet. Evaluation is crucial • So people are finding information from the Internet and making important decisions. • But what if the information is wrong? • Evaluation is crucial. Dangers include: • Outdated information • Inaccuracies and errors • Hate sites and malicious “misinformation” • Disguised marketing at product sites • Biased opinions portrayed as fact A Google search for: • Cancer will get you some drug and pharmacy sites • Nutrition will get you some food and industry sites • Martin Luther King will get you some racist sites • Investing will get you some stock broker sites Criteria for Evaluation: SCOPE • Five criteria can help you evaluate information on the Internet • Signatory: who is the publisher? • Currency: is the site updated and timely? • Objective: is the site opinionated, biased? • Purpose: what is the site’s purpose? • Evidence: is the site accurate, verified? Signatory • Is the author or publisher clearly named on the site? • What are the author’s qualifications for writing or posting the site? • Does the author provide biographical experience? • Is the author an authority? Currency • Is the information timely? • Does the content of the work seem up-todate? • Is the publication date clearly indicated? Objective • How objective is the information? • Is the information presented with bias or a strong point of view? • To what extent is the information trying to sway the opinion of the audience? Purpose • What type of page is it? • What is the purpose of the site? • What are the goals or aims? • To inform? To convince you? To sell you a product? • • • • • • • Types of Page Advocacy Business/Marketing Informational News Personal Entertainment Evidence • How accurate does the information appear the site? • Is their evidence presented? • Does the information or coverage seem complete? • Are there references? Caveat Emptor • “Let the buyer beware” • Information is readily available on the Internet. • It is up to the buyer – or user – to check that information. • Use the SCOPE criteria to evaluate information on the Internet