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Title
What are you looking for?
Category
general
UUID
a9573fe5f91e4e64b218f52f650c6a67
Source URL
https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/finding-information/what-are-you-looki...
Parent URL
https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/learning-at-university/
Crawl Time
2026-03-16T03:25:56+00:00
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What are you looking for?

Source: https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/finding-information/what-are-you-looking-for/ Parent: https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/learning-at-university/

  1. Home  » 2. Finding information

What are you looking for?

Before you starting looking for information, clarify what you need. This will help you search more effectively.

Identify your information need

Analyse your assessment question to clarify what information you need

Ask yourself:

Then ask yourself

Identify keywords to help you search for information

Keyword table

TOPIC: Educating for sustainability in New Zealand school

What type of information do you need?

For some assessments, you will need to use different information sources (e.g., primary or secondary), information types (e.g., journal articles, images, etc.), or scholarly literature. Make sure you know what you are looking for. Check your assessment instructions for guidance.

What are primary sources?

Primary sources are materials created at a moment in time.  They can provide a first-hand account or information about an event, people, or experience and have not been altered by interpretation or evaluation.

Common examples of primary sources

What are secondary sources?

Secondary sources interpret, analyse, review or summarise primary sources, e.g., scholarly journal articles, book reviews, and textbooks discuss findings from previous research.

Why use secondary sources?

A secondary source brings together information from other sources and can provide expert analysis and context on a topic.

Examples of secondary sources:

You can find a wide variety of information types in the Catalogue, databases and beyond.

Learn more about these item types and how to find them.

What are scholarly sources?

At University, you will mostly use scholarly (or academic) sources to learn and complete assessments.\ Two common scholarly sources are journal articles and books.

What are peer-reviewed sources?

Some scholarly sources undergo a peer-review process where the quality of the information is checked by experts before publication.\ When searching the library catalogue or a database, check to see if you can filter your search results to peer-reviewed sources.

How do you identify a scholarly source

Academic sources:

Popular sources:

Tip: Just because something isn’t peer-reviewed doesn’t make it bad information – you just need to evaluate it yourself.

What is grey literature?

Grey (gray) literature is a term used to describe various information types produced by individuals or non-profit groups, government departments, trade or industry or professional groups, private companies or academic or research institutes.

The type of grey literature that could be useful to your research will vary according to the subject area.

Common types include:

Why use grey literature?

They can provide more current information on a topic; however, you will need to critically evaluate the quality of information as unlike academic information sources, grey literature may not go through a peer review process.

Grey literature is not produced by traditional commercial or academic publishers. This means they can be less discoverable or accessible as they are made for a specific audience, e.g., for company research, annual reports and other financial data may only be available to stakeholders or accessible through subscription databases.

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