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ARTS 090-010: How should we remember?: The case of slavery in early Bethlehem

Make the most of your course guide!

Pub. by R. Ramsay Mebane, Wilkes-Barre, PA., Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Use the tabs in this guide to:

  • Learn strategies for evaluating information
  • Find interdisciplinary and subject specific sources and how to cite them
  • "Geek out" on library resources

The Research Process

Source descriptions

Source type definitions. Reference (topic overviews), newspapers & magazines (timely info), books (background & in-depth), academic articles (scholar)

 

Sources are created with specific purposes in mind. For example, reference material has been created to provide basic facts and overviews of topics. Think about what your research need is and then search for the type of resource that would have been created to fill that need.

Information timeline

Timeline of where and in what format information about an event is published.

Information Timeline Graphic by adstarkel. Used under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

When an event first happens, there is not a lot of information about it because information takes time to create. As your event recedes into the past, there has been time for more accurate and in-depth information to have been created. If you are not finding information on your event, consider where your event is in this timeline. Has there been enough time for a scholarly article to have been written about your event?