Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBeverly Blair Modified over 8 years ago
2
Research question – Monday, Feb. 24th Source cards (need 6) – Friday, Feb. 28th Note cards, 1 st check – Friday, March 7th Thesis (your research question answered) – Friday, March 7th More note cards – Friday, March 14th Outline – Friday, March 21st Rough draft – Wednesday, April 2nd Works Cited – Wednesday, April 2nd Final Copy – Monday, April 14th
3
Set up an account on Student Research Center to save your articles › Go to Infohio › Click on Grades 9-12 › Click on EBSOhost › Click on Student Research Center › Click on Sign In (at top) › Click on Create an Account (under log in) Remember your username and password!
4
Interesting – holds your interest and that of your audience; it’s something you want to learn about Manageable – you only have a limited amount of time and resources available, so choose a topic you can handle Worthwhile – choose something of substance, something that matters Original – a good topic is not just a rehashing (like Abe Lincoln’s childhood); a better topic is how books he read as a child influenced his political decisions
6
Too broad – Ice Age is too broad; the role of the Ice Age in the formation of the Great Lakes is better Too narrow – avoid a topic for which little information is available (metric cooking conversions is too narrow)
7
Too trivial – every driver’s manual will name same laws of the road Too subjective – you need to set personal preferences aside to respond objectively Too controversial – hotly contested arguments can bog you down with information Too familiar – you’ll be bored Too technical – the research is difficult in itself; don’t try to learn a whole new language Too factual – shouldn’t be a recitation of facts Too new – may have insufficient research Too regional – localized topics won’t have enough
8
Example: I'm thinking of doing a paper on "education." This topic could develop in many different ways. Hint: Ask Yourself Questions About Your Topic: What do you know about it? What don't you know? What aspects or sub-points of your topic interest you: historical, sociological, psychological, etc.? What time period do you want to cover? What is controversial about this topic?
9
General Topic:Education Time span:20 th and 21 st century Place:US Person or group:Youth/High School Controversial Aspects: Year-round schooling, standardized testing, zero tolerance policies, school choice Research Questions: Is year-round schooling particularly beneficial for low-income students? Does standardized testing limit the development of creative thinkers? Have zero tolerance policies improved student behavior?
10
Check out your topic in an encyclopedia (Infohio, Worldbook Advanced or an Internet encyclopedia) to get key ideas/terms Check out your topic on Instagrok (topic and organization ideas) Do a general search on an Infohio database according to the subject of your topic -- just look for magazine articles Search your topic on the Internet (.net,.gov, and.org tend to be more reliable sites); any information you find must be credible (you must prove it)
11
When searching for your topic, be considerate of the different ways you can rephrase/reword your topic. Using synonyms for key words can help you narrow or broaden your topic Check out this link for examples: http://subjectguides.fortlewis.edu/content. php?pid=444743&sid=3643026
12
Start with a topic Narrow and focus your topic Formulate a question you want to ask about your topic Narrow the question if possible
13
Ask specific questions about your topic that could lead to a debate/argument. For example – (Topic) Animal Testing 1. When products are tested on animals, are safety precautions used? 2. Are there any existing laws which gives animals rights against harmful testing? 3. Have animals died or suffered adverse side effects as a result of product testing?
14
Reflects the purpose of your paper Is a clear, focused, concise, complex and arguable question How are online users experiencing or addressing privacy issues on such social networking sites as MySpace and Facebook? What are common traits of those suffering from diabetes in America, and how can these commonalities be used to aid the medical community in prevention of the disease? After research, you will answer your question in the form of a thesis statment
15
Your information should be current – avoid sources that are more than 5 years old You need to reference at least six resource in your paper – find eight to give yourself leeway Make an account on Ebscohost so you can save articles that look promising instead of printing everything out
16
On Infohio, check only magazines/periodicals at first Log in to Student Research Center › Save promising articles to your folder When you print an article, be sure to click the Citation Format and from pull down menu, select MLA Create a word document Works Cited As you print articles, copy and paste the citation into your Works Cited page and save The citations are not always perfect; you will need to double check at OWL at Purdue
17
You need to make a source card for each of your resources (the citation and number each source) You need to take notes on your research on notecards (follow guidelines for setting up a notecard) See Notetaking document for specifics
18
Research question – Monday, Feb. 24th Source cards – Friday, Feb. 28th Note cards, 1 st check – Friday, March 7th Thesis (your research question answered) – Friday, March 7th More note cards – Friday, March 14th Outline – Friday, March 21st Rough draft – Wednesday, April 2nd Works Cited – Wednesday, April 2nd Final Copy – Monday, April 14th
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.