Newspapers
Newspapers
are a type of periodical. Many newspapers are
published daily and
are intended for
a local or regional audience.
The purpose of most newspapers is to provide current
event awareness and general interest
information geared towards their local readership.
Strengths:
- Newspapers
have extremely
current information and are
useful for time-sensitive
information
- Newspapers
provide effective current
event awareness and are particularly
interested in reporting on political
events and developments
- Newspapers
provide local
information for the geographic
areas with which they are associated
- Newspapers
can provide a context
when examining historic or social events (for
example, if you were studying School
Desegregation and the Brown v. Board of Education
of Topeka Supreme Court case, newspapers
from that time would give you a perspective
about the opinions that were current and other
events going on at the same time)
- Newspapers
often contain opinion
articles and editorials, providing
a window into the way people perceive and interpret
events
Weaknesses:
- Newspapers
do not provide
scholarly analysis
- Newspapers
are not created to be permanent. Therefore old
newspapers tend to be preserved on microfilm
or microfiche rather than in
their original format
- Newspapers
with small circulations can
be difficult to locate
- Newspapers
do not always
report the source of their information
Finding
articles in Newspapers:
- Newspapers
tend to have their own
indexes for each paper
- LexisNexis
(one of our databases in ALADIN) provides online
searchable access to a
large number of newspapers
- Public
libraries often
both create an index for and provide access
to the local
newspapers in their geographic
areas
|