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13.1.15: The CRAAP Method

  • Page ID
    219182
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    Learning Objectives
    • Examine the criteria used in the CRAAP Method
    • Use the CRAAP method to analyze the currency, relevance, authority, accuracy, reliability, and purpose of a source

    Using the acronym CRAAP, we can carefully evaluate the effectiveness, authority, and credibility of a source. CRAAP stands for currency, relevance, authority, accuracy, and purpose. Let’s take a closer look at each of these pieces below.

    Currency: The timeliness of the information

    Key Question: When was the item of information published or produced?

    A graphic titled "Analyze" with the C.R.A.A.P. source analysis acronym spelled out: Currency, Relevance, Authority, Accuracy, Purpose. Figure 1. Taking into account every aspect of the CRAAP acronym will help you to choose the most reliable and applicable sources which will increase your credibility as a writer.

    Determining when an item of information was published or produced is an aspect of evaluating information. The date information was published or produced tells you how current it is or how contemporaneous it is with the topic you are researching. There are two facets to the issue of currency.

    • Is the information the most recent version?
    • Is the information the original research, description, or account?

    The question of most recent version of information versus an original or primary version can be a critical one. For example: If you were doing a project on the survival of passengers in car crashes, you would need the most recent information on automobile crash tests, structural strength of materials, car wreck mortality statistics, etc. If, on the other hand, you were doing a project on the feelings of college students about the Vietnam War during the 1960s, you would need information written in the 1960s by college students (primary sources) as well as materials written since then about college students in the 1960s (secondary sources). Key indicators of the currency of the information are:

    • date of copyright
    • date of publication
    • date of revision or edition
    • dates of sources cited
    • date of patent or trademark

    Relevance: The importance of the information for your needs

    Key Question: How does this source contribute to my research paper?

    The discussion of suitability above is essentially the same thing as relevance. When you read through your source, consider how the source will effectively support your argument and how you can utilize the source in your paper. You should also consider whether the source provides sufficient coverage of the topic. Information sources with broad, shallow coverage mean that you need to find other sources of information to obtain adequate details about your topic. Information sources with a very narrow focus or a distinct bias mean that you need to find additional sources to obtain the information on other aspects of your topic. Some questions to consider are:

    • Does the information relate to my topic or answer my question?
    • Who is the intended audience?
    • Is the information at an appropriate level (i.e. not too simple or advanced) for my needs?
    • Did I look at a variety of sources before deciding to use this one?
    • Would I be comfortable using this source for my college research paper?

    Authority: The source of the information

    Key Question: Is the person, organization, or institution responsible for the intellectual content of the information knowledgeable in that subject?

    Determining the knowledge and expertise of the author of information is an important aspect of evaluating the reliability of information. Anyone can make an assertion or a statement about some thing, event, or idea, but only someone who knows or understands what that thing, event, or idea is can make a reasonably reliable statement or assertion about it. Some external indications of knowledge of or expertise are:

    • a formal academic degree in a subject area
    • professional or work-related experience–businessmen, government agency personnel, sports figures, etc. have expertise on their area of work
    • active involvement in a subject or organization by serious amateurs who spend substantial amounts of personal time researching and studying that subject area.
    • organizations, agencies, institutions, corporations with active involvement or work in a particular subject area.

    HINT: Be careful of opinions stated by professionals outside of their area of work expertise.

    Accuracy: The reliability, truthfulness, and correctness of the information

    Key Question: How free from error is this piece of information?

    Establishing the accuracy, or relative accuracy, of information is an important part of evaluating the reliability of information. It is easier to establish the accuracy of facts than it is opinions, interpretations, or ideas. The more an idea, opinion, or other piece of information varies from the accepted point of view on a particular topic the harder it is to establish its accuracy. It may be completely accurate but corroborating it is both more necessary and more difficult. An important aspect of accuracy is the intellectual integrity of the item.

    • Are the sources appropriately cited in the text and listed in the references?
    • Are quotations cited correctly and in context? Out of context quotations can be misleading and sometimes completely erroneous.
    • Are there exaggerations, omissions, or errors? These are difficulty to identify if you use only one source of information. Always use several different sources of information on your topic. Analyzing what different sources say about a topic is one way to understand that topic.

    In addition to errors of fact and integrity, you need to watch for errors of logic. Errors of logic occur primarily in the presentation of conclusions, opinions, interpretations, editorials, ideas, etc. Some indications that information is accurate are:

    • the same information can be found in other reliable sources
    • the experiment can be replicated and returns the same results
    • the documentation provided in support of the information is substantive
    • the sources used for documentation are known to be generally reliable
    • the author of the information is known to have expertise on that subject
    • the presentation is free from logical fallacies or errors
    • quotations are “in context”-the meaning of the original work is kept in the work which quotes the original
    • quotations are correctly cited
    • acronyms are clearly defined at the beginning

    Some indications that information may not be accurate are:

    • facts cannot be verified or are contradicted in other sources
    • sources used are known to be unreliable or highly biased
    • bibliography of sources used is inadequate or non-existent
    • quotations are taken out of context and given a different meaning
    • acronyms are not defined and the intended audience is a general one
    • presence of one or more logical fallacies
    • authority cited is another part of the same organization

    Purpose: The reason the information exists

    Key Question: Who is this information written for or this product developed for?

    Identifying the intended audience of the information or product is another aspect of evaluating information. The intended audience of an item generally determines the style of presentation, the level of technical detail, and the depth of coverage. You should also consider the author’s objectivity. Are they trying to persuade? Do they present any bias? While it is unlikely that anything humans do is ever absolutely objective, it is important to establish that the information you intend to use is reasonably objective, or if it is not, to establish exactly what the point of view or bias is. There are times when information expressing a particular point of view or bias is useful, but you must use it consciously. You must know what the point of view is and why that point of view is important to your project. For example, books on food sanitation written for children, for restaurant workers, or for research microbiologists will be very different even though they all cover the same topic.

    Determining the intended audience of a particular piece of information will help you decide whether or not the information will be too basic, too technical, too general, or just right for your needs. The intended audience can also indicate the potential reliability of the item because some audiences require more documentation than others.

    For example, items produced for scholarly or professional audiences are generally produced by experts and go through a peer evaluation process. Items produced for the mass market frequently are not produced by experts and generally do not go through an evaluation process. Some indications of the intended audience are:

    • highly technical language, complex analysis, very sophisticated/technical tools can indicate a technical, professional, or scholarly audience
    • how-to information or current practices in “X” are frequently written by experts for practitioners in that field
    • substantive and serious presentations of a topic with not too much technical language are generally written for the educated lay audience
    • popular language, fairly simple presentations of a topic, little or no analysis, inexpensive tools can indicate a general or popular audience
    • bibliographies, especially long bibliographies, are generally compiled by and for those doing research on that topic
    Link to Learning

    Review the steps of the CRAAP method and practice evaluating sources in this tutorial from Eastern Michigan University. Be sure to complete the practice exercises at the end of the tutorial.

    Watch It

    Watch this video for a recap of each of the components of the CRAAP method.

    A link to an interactive elements can be found at the bottom of this page.

    You can view the transcript for “How Library Stuff Works: How to Evaluate Resources (the CRAAP test) here (opens in new window).

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