O- Objectivity
Another important issue you must evaluate is the objectivity of the web source. To evaluate the objectivity of the web source, you must first determine its purpose and then you’ll want to consider if it contains any biases.
Question 1: What is the purpose of the web source?
Websites generally can be grouped into four different categories: informational/news,
business/marketing, advocacy, and personal. All of these categories may be useful
to you at one point or another. Scholarly sources will often fall into the informational/news
category. How do you know if the site falls under the informational/news category?
The purpose of informational or news websites is to provide you with factual information.
Informational sources often end in .edu (educational institution) or .gov (government
agency).
The other categories—business/marketing, advocacy, and personal—may be as useful as sources in the informational/news category, depending upon your writing situation. Let’s consider two examples. If you’re a business major, you may have to find out information about a business’ purpose, goals, objectives, history, and so on. While a website that falls into “business/marketing” category may have a primary purpose to market some item, it is likely that you’ll find this kind of information on its website and that the information will apply and be valuable to your writing situation. Now let’s say you’re writing a paper about water conservation, and you’ve come across a website that advocates various environmental issues. You find a comprehensive report written by authorities well-respected in the field. Can you use the report? Most likely, you’ll use the report. While many non-profit organizations (.org) advocate a certain viewpoint, you can also find valuable information or reports that may apply to your writing situation. You’ll want to be aware of a source’s perspectives and agenda when you decide whether to use the source.
Question 2: Does the web source convey any biases?
Question two also aims to increase your understanding of the purpose of the web
source; deciding what category (discussed briefly above) the website fits into may
help a great deal in determining if the website has any biases. Advocacy and personal
websites in particular may be prone to bias. However, in addition to determining
the purpose of the website itself, you must evaluate if the author of the particular
article or page you are reading has any biases.
As Kirk (1996) points out, “information is rarely neutral,” but you
want to avoid sources where the author is not reasonable. Ask yourself about the
author’s political, social, or professional background and how that background
impacts the source. The author should be fair in his or her views, so you may want
to ask yourself is there any information that the author is not including but should
be. When alternative viewpoints are presented, how did the author handle it? Bias
may or may not impact the usefulness of the source, but you want to be wary of emotional
appeals, misleading information, and politically-skewed language.
Open House in Victoria - 5/23/2013
City Golf Championship Banquet - 5/25/2013
Degree Information Session - 5/29/2013
President's Regional Advisory Board - 6/4/2013
Vietnam War Conference - 6/13/2013
Vietnam War Conference - 6/14/2013
Freshman Advising and Preregistration Day - 6/15/2013
UHV math professor teaches innovative lesson plans - 05/20/2013
UHV receives designation as Hispanic-Serving Institution - 05/17/2013
UHV SBDC staff members earn global certifications - 05/17/2013
UHV graduates earn among highest first-year paychecks in Texas - 05/16/2013
UHV student receives Salute to Nurses scholarship - 05/16/2013
UHV to offer robotics, digital simulation camp for high school students - 05/16/2013
SBDC seminar to offer free advice on selling to governments - 05/16/2013
UHV open house to help students prepare for summer, fall semesters - 05/16/2013