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ENG 3100 Business Writing: Source Types

Scholarly, Popular and Trade Sources

  Scholarly Article Popular Article Trade Article
Author Researchers, experts Journalists, non-experts Professionals in the field
Source Academic Journals Newspapers, magazines Newspapers, magazines
Purpose To share research findings General information Information specific to the profession
Audience Researchers, scholars General public People working in the profession
Vocabulary Specialized vocabulary Everyday language Some technical terms/language
Citations Provides for all sources Few or none provided Few or none provided

 

CAARP

Use the CAARP Test to evaluate sources

Currency Consider the timeliness of the information. 
When was it published? Is it current or out-of-date for the topic?
 
Authority Who is the author/publisher/creator? Are the author/organization’s credentials provided? What are the author’s qualifications to write on the topic?
Accuracy What is the reliability, truthfulness, and correctness of the informational content? Where does the information come from? Is it supported by evidence?
Relevance How does the source meet your needs? Does the information relate to your topic or answer your questions? Who is the intended audience?
Purpose What is the reason the information exists? What is the purpose of the information? To inform? Teach? Sell? Entertain? Persuade? Do the authors make their intentions or purpose clear? Is the information fact? Is it biased?

 

Peer Review Process

Librarian

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Jackie Eagleson
she/her
Contact:
eaglesonjj@appstate.edu
(828) 262-7424