Evaluating What You Find on the Internet:
When doing research using the internet, you will likely run across a whole range and variety of resources. For help with judging the usefulness and authority of webpages, consult these resources:
Evaluating Information Found on the Internet
A guide by Elizabeth Kirk, Johns Hopkins University Libraries. Nicely lays out the criteria for consideration.
Evaluating Web Content
Guide from the University at Albany Libraries.
Internet Detective Tutorial (Wise up to the Web)
British site Intute: Best of the Web tutorial on evaluating internet resources.
Citing Sources
Middlebury College Libraries Citation and Style Guide
Purdue Owl (Online Writing Lab)
See their Research and Citation section.
Another option besides doing a standard bibliography or works cited list is to use an "annotated bibliography". It includes a citation and a written statement or abstract about each work to help potential readers decide if an item is relevant to their interests.
How to create an Annotated Bibliography
See the Annotated Bibliographies handout (PDF)