Evaluate and utilize resources to research information about the arts (course level learning objective)
Introduction
Has someone ever related some fact or story you were immediately skeptical of? Of course, we’ve all had that happen. Information is only as reliable as its source. Often in our information-saturated lives, the value of good-quality information gets lost amid the vast quantity of fairly shallow information available for quick consumption.
It’s important to cite your sources for several reasons:
- to demonstrate that your information is trustworthy because it comes from well-researched sources;
- to avoid plagiarism and responsibly credit other people’s ideas and work;
- and to allow others to validate your ideas and research by tracking down the sources you used.
As you work through the last module, consider why it’s important to follow a specific system for citing works—in the case of the humanities, the MLA format. Also, consider how newly discovered works of art become authenticated.
Module Learning Outcomes
- Identify and evaluate relevant source materials for arts
- Document research sources appropriately using MLA format
Candela Citations
CC licensed content, Original
- Why It Matters: Research Arts Information. Authored by: Lumen Learning and Wendy Riley. License: CC BY: Attribution
All rights reserved content
- Woman in Gold Official Trailer #1 (2015) - Ryan Reynolds, Helen Mirren Movie HD. Authored by: MOVIECLIPS Trailers. Located at: https://youtu.be/geJeX6iIlO0. License: All Rights Reserved. License Terms: Standard YouTube license