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San Juan College Library Services

History

Recommended Citation Websites

As a discipline in the humanities, higher level writing in history is cited in Chicago style citations. Occasionally, works are cited in MLA or APA, especially in intro level classes. This guide will focus on Chicago style citations. See the library research libguide for more information on different types of citations. 

Recommended Citation Books

Recommended Writing Books

Writing about History

Evaluating Websites

To evaluate a website (or any source you encounter), use the following criteria:

Currency

1. When was the page created and/or updated?
2. Do the links on the page work?
3. Does your topic require current information?

Relevance

1. Does the information relate to your topic?
2. Who is the intended audience? Is the level too elementary or advanced for your needs?
3. Do the links lead to other reputable sites?

Authority

1. What type of organization published this site? (.edu, .gov, .org, .com).
2. Who is the author, publisher or source? Is there contact information?
3. Is the author qualified to write on this topic?

Accuracy

1. Where does the information come from? Has it been reviewed (Peer reviewed)?
2. Is the information supported by evidence? Can you verify it in another source?
3. Are there spelling, grammar or typing errors?

Purpose

1. Always ask, why was this written and for whom.
2. Is the purpose of this site to teach, inform, entertain, sell or persuade?
3. Is the information factual, opinion or propaganda, objective or impartial?
4. Are there political, religious, cultural, ideological or personal biases?
5. Is advertising clearly differentiated from the informational content?

 

Use this worksheet to evaluate sources.