In this post I should be valuing online sources, which for example I might be using when I'll write my theses... Well, to tell the truth I have never thought about it before! I agree with what it is written on the Essex university's tips because when I start a search on the web and find a page which seems to me interesting, I always check the author and the nation to which the pieces of information belong to. It is important to me if the webpage is related to academic or cultural organization: obviously they appear to be more reliable than others. Another tip on how I spot relevant pages is finding out if the sources offers a number of links to which I can refer to discover more about a subject. This might be really helpful, for generally the most important websites connected to a subject, are always linking one each other. Sometimes I judge webpages even from the point of view the layout: it is important for me the way in which a web site is structured, even more when for example I have access to it more than once. If it is uncomfortable to me, I usually leave it aside.
However to tell the truth, I believe that Internet might be a reliable source, when you have to deal with subjects that have been recently developped, when for example it is difficult to find information about them on specific books or reviews. In other cases many pages on the Internet report superficial, false or even wrong information. That's why we should pay attention, as many of our professors at the university tell to us, to what we can find on online sources.
Alice
However to tell the truth, I believe that Internet might be a reliable source, when you have to deal with subjects that have been recently developped, when for example it is difficult to find information about them on specific books or reviews. In other cases many pages on the Internet report superficial, false or even wrong information. That's why we should pay attention, as many of our professors at the university tell to us, to what we can find on online sources.
Alice