Research Like the Old School

April 24, 2015

There was a time before the Internet that if you wanted to research something you had to go to the library, dig through old archives, and check encyclopedias for quick facts.  While it seems that all information is at your disposable with a few keystrokes, but search results are often polluted with paid ads and unless your information comes from a trusted source, you can’t count it as fact.

LifeHacker, like many of us, knows that if you want to get the truth behind a topic, you have to do some old school sleuthing.  The article “How To Research Like A Journalist When The Internet Doesn’t Deliver” drills down tried and true research methods that will continue to withstand the sands of time or the wrecking ball (depending on how long libraries remain brick and mortar buildings).

The article pushes using librarians as resources and even going as far as petitioning government agencies and filing FOIA requests for information.  When it makes the claim that some information is only available in person or strictly for other librarians, this is both true and false.  Many libraries are trying to digitize their information, but due to budgets are limited in their resources.  Also unless the librarian works in a top secret archive, most of the information is readily available to anyone with or without the MLS degree.

Old school interviews are always great, especially when you have to cite a source.  You can always cite your own interview and verify it cam straight from the horse’s mouth.  One useful way to team the Internet with interviews is tracking down the interviewees.

Lastly, this is the best piece of advice from the article:

“Finally, once you’ve done all of this digging, visited government agencies, libraries, and the offices of the people with the knowledge you need, don’t lose it. Archive everything. Digitize those notes and the recordings of your interviews. Make copies of any material you’ve gotten your hands on, then scan them and archive them safely.”

The Internet is full of false information.  By placing a little more credence out there, will make the information more safe to use or claim as the truth.

These tips are useful, even if a little obvious, but they however still fail to mention the important step that all librarians know: doing the actual footwork and proper search methods to find things.

Whitney Grace, April 24, 2015

Sponsored by ArnoldIT.com, publisher of the CyberOSINT monograph

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