What do you hope to accomplish by using sources? Some common reasons you might use sources in your own work include:
Adapted from Yale College Writing Center's "Using Sources" webpage
you'll want to see if certain types of sources are required or recommended by your instructor. Some professors require you to use only scholarly peer-reviewed journals, primary sources, newspapers, or books from the library, while others might leave things more open-ended.
If you need: |
Try using: |
---|---|
Expert evidence | Scholarly articles, books, and statistical data |
Public or individual opinion on an issue | Newspapers, magazines, and websites |
Basic facts about an event | Newspapers, books, encyclopedias (for older and well-known events) |
Eye-witness accounts | Newspapers, primary source books, web-based collection of primary sources |
A general overview of a topic | Books or encyclopedias |
Information about a very recent topic | Websites, newspapers, and magazines |
Local information | Newspapers, websites, and books |
Information from professionals working in the field | Professional/trade journals |
Learn more about what "peer-reviewed" means or how to determine if an article is peer-reviewed.
Note: In many databases, you can limit your search to scholarly, peer-reviewed or refereed journals. However, this option is not perfect, as it may also remove some peer-reviewed content as well.
Examples: School Library Journal, Harvard Business Review, Engineering and Mining Journal, and American Biology Teacher.
Examples: The New Yorker, People, and Rolling Stone
Examples: newspaper articles, government documents, letters, diaries, autobiographies, speeches, oral histories, museum artifacts, and photographs
Examples: a book about World War II based on records from the time, a journal article about Chinese immigrants to Portland (Most books and articles are secondary sources.)