How can you tell if the information you find is good information? Use the CRAAP test. It's a list of questions to help you evaluate the information you find. Different criteria will be more or less important depending on your situation or need.
The timeliness of the information.
The importance of the information for your needs.
The source of the information.
The reliability, truthfulness and correctness of the content.
The reason the information exists.
CRAAP test adapted from California State University, Chico.
Google Scholar, http://scholar.google.com/, is a way to search the internet for scholarly information on a given topic. Unlike a normal Google search, Google Scholar searches for scholarly information provided by academic publishers, professional societies, universities, repositories and scholarly organizations. The types of information Google Scholar provides include:
For the most part, Google Scholar provides a citation to articles without full-text access. If you use Google Scholar on campus you can see links to full text articles via library databases.
If you are using Google Scholar off campus, you will need to link Google Scholar to the full-text resources of Westchester Community College. You can consult our online guide on how to link WCC resources.
When searching google type site:gov or site:edu. This will limit your search to sites that end in either a .gov or a .edu, which will provide you with more authoritative information.
If you need peer reviewed quality research on current topics use the word digitalcommons when search site:edu
Ex. site:edu turkey "economic relations" digitalcommons
This search will limit your search to college websites and sources published in the institutions digitalcommons. Please check to make sure the source is authored by a professor a student pursuing a masters or doctoral degree. Papers published by undergraduates isn't scholarly enough to cite in your work