Grade 8 Reading | FL B.E.S.T. Standard: ELA.8.R.2.3
In today's world, information is everywhere - but not all of it is trustworthy. You'll learn to evaluate sources for reliability, identify bias, and compare information across multiple sources to find the truth.
Use these five criteria to evaluate any source:
When was it published? Is it up to date?
Does it relate to your topic?
Is it supported by evidence?
Why was it written? To inform, sell, persuade?
"Solar energy is the best choice for homeowners. Our panels save thousands on electricity bills. Everyone should switch to solar immediately!"
Currency: 2024 - Recent and current
Relevance: About solar energy - relevant to topic
Authority: Company selling panels - potential bias!
Accuracy: "Best choice" and "everyone should" - opinions, not facts
Purpose: To sell products - not objective information
Verdict: This source has bias because the company profits from solar sales. Use with caution!
These words signal that the author is sharing OPINIONS, not facts!
Original, first-hand
Diaries, interviews, photos, original research
Analysis of primary sources
Textbooks, news articles, documentaries
Summaries of other sources
Encyclopedias, Wikipedia, directories
Remember: "Corroboration" = confirming facts across multiple sources
"Buy HealthyLife vitamins today! Our supplements are proven to boost energy. Order now and save 50%!"
"Obviously, video games are destroying young minds. Any reasonable person can see that children should never play these terrible games."