Research Skills and Informational Texts
Reading and Comprehension
Students learn to locate, evaluate, and synthesize information from multiple sources including books, encyclopedias, and age-appropriate websites. They practice taking notes, avoiding plagiarism, and organizing research into a simple outline.
Learning Material
4 pagesFinding and Evaluating Sources
Finding and Evaluating Sources#
When you research a topic, you need information — but not all information is equally trustworthy. A key skill for Grade 4 researchers is learning to find good sources and evaluate whether they can be trusted.
Types of Sources#
Researchers use many types of sources:
- Books — Textbooks, nonfiction books, and reference books like encyclopedias are generally reliable.
- Encyclopedias — Both print and digital encyclopedias (like World Book or Britannica) provide accurate overviews of topics.
- Age-appropriate websites — Sites ending in .edu (educational) or .gov (government) are usually trustworthy. Sites created by museums, national parks, and libraries are also reliable.
- Magazines and newspapers — Reputable publications provide current, fact-checked information.
How to Evaluate a Source#
Before using a source, ask these questions:
- Who wrote it? Is the author an expert on the topic?
- When was it published? Is the information current, or might it be outdated?
- Why was it written? Is the purpose to inform, or to sell something or push an opinion?
- Can you verify it? Dös other reliable information say the same thing?
If you cannot answer these questions, be careful about using the source.
Primary vs. Secondary Sources#
- A primary source is created by someone who was there — a diary, a photograph, an interview, an original document.
- A secondary source describes or analyzes primary sources — a textbook chapter about the American Revolution, for example.
Good research often uses both types.
Using Multiple Sources#
Never rely on just one source. Use at least two or three sources to verify facts and gather a complete picture. When multiple reliable sources agree on a fact, you can be more confident it is accurate.
Developing strong source evaluation skills now will serve you throughout your education and life.