Research Help

Selecting the Right Source

Newspapers, Magazines, Journals, Books, and Online Resources

It is important to think critically about possible sources of information for a paper or project. Who has written the item? Why? What would be credible to a professor or colleague? There are many other questions to consider when doing research.

Many students are particularly confused about when it is appropriate to use newspaper articles, magazine articles, journal articles, or books for their papers. And what about World Wide Web resources?

For more information about selecting and using these various sources, visit these pages:

Check with a librarian for additional help, if necessary.

For help with getting a focus on your topic, visit the How to Narrow or Broaden Your Topic Web page.

Newspapers

Use newspapers for:

To locate newspaper stories, search E-Resources by Type; includes online access to the Los Angeles Times, The New York Times, and Wall Street Journal; or Lexis-Nexis Academic Universe.

Magazines

Try a magazine for:

To locate articles, search Academic Search Complete or the print version of Readers' Guide to Periodical Literature or ask a reference librarian for suggestions.

Journals

Try a journal for:

To locate articles, search Academic Search Complete, PsycINFO, or other computerized indexes and print indexes such as Women Studies Abstracts and Alternative Press Index, or ask a reference librarian for suggestions. 

Books

World Wide Web Resources

Try a Web resource for:

  • reviewing legislation on family issues
  • finding research or other information about single-parent families
  • locating listservs and newsgroups for single parents
  •