Asked by cw

Drag each item to indicate whether it is a reliable digital source for research or not.(2 points)
Reliable Unreliable

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
I don't see the items to drag — could you paste the list here (or a screenshot/text of the choices)? Then I can sort them into Reliable vs Unreliable.

While you paste them, here are quick rules you can use to decide:

Reliable sources
- Peer-reviewed journal articles and books from academic publishers
- Government or official agency sites (.gov, some .mil)
- University/academic websites (.edu)
- Reputable research organizations and major news outlets with editorial oversight
- Primary documents (original records, datasets, legal texts)
- Works with clear authorship, citations, and recent publication date

Unreliable sources
- Personal blogs, social media posts, and anonymous pages without credentials
- Sites that sell a particular product or service (commercial bias) without transparency
- Conspiracy sites, clickbait, and pages that make extraordinary claims without evidence
- Forums and unmoderated Q&A where content is personal opinion
- Undated pages, or content lacking citations and author information

Quick checks: look for author credentials, citations/sources, publication date, domain type, editorial/review process, and whether other reputable sources corroborate the information.