1 / 12

Learning to Use the Internet & the World Wide Web Appendix B

Learning to Use the Internet & the World Wide Web Appendix B. By Ernest Ackermann & Karen Hartman Mary Washington College. Appendix B: Evaluating and Citing Information from the Internet and the World Wide Web. This section will help you:

Download Presentation

Learning to Use the Internet & the World Wide Web Appendix B

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Learning to Use the Internet & the World Wide Web Appendix B By Ernest Ackermann & Karen Hartman Mary Washington College

  2. Appendix B: Evaluating and Citing Information from the Internet and the World Wide Web This section will help you: • Develop a process of using critical thinking skills to help select and evaluate Web documents • Obtain knowledge of URL formats • Learn the basic elements required in an Internet and Web citation and how to cite different types of resources

  3. Reasons to Evaluate • The nature of the Internet makes it easy for almost anyone to create and disperse information. • It is important to separate facts from opinions in the content of a Web page. • Thinking critically about information and sources will help you get better results from Internet searches.

  4. Guidelines for Evaluation • Who is the author or institution? • Who is the audience? • Is the content accurate, objective, and supported by other sources? • What is the purpose of the information? • How current is the information?

  5. Citing Internet and Web Information: URL Formats • Example: http://users.mwc.edu/~khartman/educom98.html • http is the transfer protocol • users.mwc.edu is the domain name • ~khartman is the directory name • educom98 is the file name • .html is the file type

  6. Difficulties in Citing Web and Internet Resources • These resources may be updated or modified at any time • The resources may not have titles or major headings • Web pages lack page numbers • There are different citing styles

  7. Guidelines for Citing • Know which citation style you are required to use (for example, APA, MLA, Chicago) • The date the page was modified is important (if using Netscape, click on View and select Page Info).

  8. Citation Examples: Web Pages • The following elements should be included in a citation for a Web page: • Author’s name • Document title • Title of larger/complete work, if relevant • Date of last modification or revision • Date page was accessed • URL

  9. Citation Examples: Email • Elements required to cite an email message: • Author’s name • Subject of message • Date message was sent • Description and recipient of the message

  10. Citation Examples: Discussion Group or Listserv Messages • Elements required for these: • Author’s name • Subject of message or title of posting • Date of posting • Description of posting • URL of discussion group or archive • Date of access (MLA only)

  11. Citation Examples: Electronic Journal Articles • Elements required: • Author’s name • Title of article • Title of journal, volume, and issue numbers, date of publication • Number of paragraphs if possible (not always necessary) • Date of last revision, if known and different from date of publication • Date accessed • URL (if necessary and practical)

  12. Citation Examples: FTP Resources • Elements required: • Author’s name • Title of document • Size of document, if relevant • Date of last revision • URL • Date accessed

More Related