Practice Questions & Answers | Academic
Research, Citation, APA 7th, Peer-Review,
& AI Ethics
Description:
Master academic research with 100 updated information literacy exam questions covering
peer review, APA 7th citation, database search strategies, plagiarism prevention, AI
integrity, and research ethics. Includes detailed explanations.
Download the complete 2026/2027 study guide and pass your college proficiency exam with
confidence.
, Information Literacy Final Exam 2026
Academic Information Literacy Examination
School of Arts & Sciences
Academic Year: 2026/2027
Instructions: This examination assesses your understanding of foundational concepts in
academic research, source evaluation, and scholarly writing. Read each question carefully
and select the best possible answer. Each question includes an answer and a detailed
explanation to support your learning.
Section I: Scholarly Sources & Peer Review
1. You are conducting scholarly research on recent advances in diabetes treatment.
Which resource type would provide the most authoritative and current information?
A. A documentary film about diabetes history
B. A peer-reviewed medical journal article
C. A blog post written by a certified nutritionist
D. A popular health news website
Answer: B
Explanation: Peer-reviewed journal articles undergo rigorous evaluation by independent
experts in the same field before publication. This process ensures methodological soundness,
accuracy, and contribution to the scholarly conversation. While documentaries, blogs, and
news sites can offer useful background information, they lack the validation of expert peer
review and typically do not present original, empirically validated research findings.
2. A peer-reviewed journal article is best defined as:
A. An article reviewed by the author's professional colleagues for grammar and style
B. An article reviewed by experts in the same subject field prior to publication
C. An article reviewed by the general public through online comments
D. An article reviewed by a journal's editor only
Answer: B
Explanation: Peer review (also called refereeing) involves subjecting an author's scholarly
work to the scrutiny of other experts in the same academic discipline. Blind or double-blind
,review processes minimize bias. This quality control mechanism distinguishes scholarly
journals from popular magazines and is a hallmark of credible academic research.
3. Which of the following elements are typically found in a scholarly, peer-reviewed
article?
A. A brief biography of the author's pets
B. An abstract, author affiliations or credentials, and a bibliography
C. Advertisements from academic publishers
D. An appendix containing reader comments
Answer: B
Explanation: Scholarly articles consistently include an abstract (a concise summary of the
study's purpose, methods, results, and conclusions), the author's institutional affiliation
(demonstrating their expertise and accountability), and a bibliography, works cited, or
reference list (allowing readers to trace the scholarly conversation). These elements support
transparency, reproducibility, and further research.
4. When your assignment requires you to use peer-reviewed articles, where should you
focus your search?
A. General interest newspapers like USA Today
B. Popular magazines like Time or The Atlantic
C. Academic journals accessed through a research database
D. Personal websites and social media platforms
Answer: C
Explanation: Research databases such as JSTOR, ProQuest Central, PubMed, and the GCU
Library’s discovery service are designed to index, filter, and provide access to peer-reviewed
academic journals. These databases offer advanced search tools—like limiting to peer-
reviewed sources—that are not available through general internet search engines or popular
media platforms.
5. What is the most effective strategy when you find a highly relevant article and want
to locate additional similar scholarly works?
A. Search only by the publication date of the article
B. Search using the author’s name, check the references section, and identify key subject
, terms
C. Retype the article’s title into a general web browser
D. Assume the article is unique and no other related works exist
Answer: B
Explanation: An effective three-pronged approach includes: (1) author search—finding other
works by the same researcher who specializes in the topic; (2) backward citation chaining—
reviewing the reference list to find sources the author cited; and (3) keyword extraction—
using discipline-specific terminology from the article as new search terms. This
comprehensive strategy builds a robust literature review.
Section II: Primary vs. Secondary Sources
6. Which of the following is an example of a primary source?
A. A textbook chapter about the American Civil War
B. An encyclopedia entry describing climate change
C. The personal diary of Anne Frank
D. A documentary film analyzing the life of Marie Curie
Answer: C
Explanation: Primary sources provide direct, first-hand evidence about an event, object,
person, or work of art. They include original documents (diaries, letters, manuscripts),
creative works (poems, novels, music scores), artifacts, and raw data. The diary of Anne
Frank is a primary source because it is an original, contemporaneous record. Textbooks,
encyclopedias, and most documentaries synthesize and interpret primary sources and are
therefore secondary sources.
Section III: Research Process & Topic Refinement
7. You are researching "The impact of steroids on American athletics" for a three-page
essay but find you have too much information. What is the best course of action?
A. Write an essay that exceeds the page limit, hoping the instructor won't notice
B. Narrow your topic to a more focused area, such as steroid use among high school athletes
in a single state
C. Abandon the topic entirely and start over with a completely different subject
D. Use only the first three articles you found and ignore the rest