Both of the above websites provide easy-to-understand information on how to determine if your source of news is a good (reliable, true) or bad (unreliable, false) news source.
Access major U.S. and international newspapers online to search articles instantly by title, headline, date, or other fields. It also includes thousands of images, radio and TV broadcasts, and transcripts.
Gale In Context: High School
General Database used to explore thousands of topics across subjects including literature, science, history, and social issues using different sources.
EBSCO Explora
In Explora, conduct keyword searches or browse topics by category to find informational texts, primary sources, multimedia (images, videos, etc.) and more.
History Reference Center
Covering topics in U.S. and world history from the earliest civilizations through the 21st century, History Reference Center is a research database containing full-text journals, magazines, reference books and thousands of primary source documents.
AP Newsroom
View the greatest events in world history with photographs, audio sound bites, video, and graphics, for over 185 years. Over 3,000 photos/images/sound bites/graphics added daily, including audio and visual snapshots of breaking news events, today's hot topics, great moments in news, sports and entertainment, celebrity portraits, and 20 million royalty-free stock.
JSTOR
JSTOR is a digital library of journals, academic ebooks, images, and primary sources.
World Book Advanced
Designed for high school students, World Book Advanced is a powerful reference tool that includes full encyclopedic and multimedia databases supplemented with online books, primary sources, website links, Back in Time articles, special reports and more.