First, check with your instructor!
If you are planning
to "google" the Web for your research, any sources that you find should be
authenticated. The sites you locate might contain deceptive, biased, or
incorrect information. It will be your job to determine which information meets
the rigors of academic research. For this reason instructors and librarians often
encourage you to use only the library's Web resources, where much of the
authentication has already been done for you.
Wikipedia is a free online encyclopaedia containing millions of articles. Anyone can write and edit the articles. It's a great place to start looking for information, but it's usually not acceptable as an information source for academic work.
Ask your instructor if Wikipedia is appropriate for your assignment!
You may have grown up with the Internet and feel very confident using Google or Wikipedia. But, do you really know how to conduct academic research on the Web?
You can find some great information out there, but using the Web for academic research requires diligent evaluation.
Questions to ask:
Scholarly articles are:
in-depth | written by experts | validated with technical language, abstracts, literature reviews, methodologies, tables, graphs, and conclusions | reviewed by experts | given a bibliography
Popular articles are:
brief overviews of topics | written by journalists | easily read by most people | illustrated with colorful photographs or pictures | reviewed by editors | not given a bibliography