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INTRODUCTION TO RESEARCH
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Learning to become a researcher By the time you get to college, you will be expected to advance from: Information retrieval– collecting facts about what is already known to Scholarly research – adding new information and ideas to the body of information on a topic.
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Research leads to Knowledge Collecting facts. Asking questions about what has happened or what exists. Considering different perspectives and points of view. Stating your own opinion based on information you have gathered. Adding new information and conclusions based on study and factual information.
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Plan your research.
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1. Task Definition Define the information problem Research begins with a question. Instead of collecting facts, find out why. What information do you need to answer the question? What is important about this information, and how does it really help you understand the topic?
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Develop a Question for Your Topic Example Topic: Film and Television of the 1960s Question 1: What were some of the most popular TV shows and films of the 1960s? Question 2: How did the TV shows and films reflect every day life and changes in society? Question 3: How do they differ from current TV and films?
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2. Information Seeking Strategies Determine all possible sources Select the best sources 3 or more sources Print: monographs, reference books Databases vs. Search Engines Databases vs. Search Engines Websites – Web Path Express What about wikis? How do you evaluate which is the BEST source?
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Wikipedia May be a good place to get general information about a topic and is frequently updated. Look at References and External Links See “About Wikipedia” and “Disclaimer” Cannot verify authors Example of misinformation: “War is over: Imaginary ‘Bicholim Conflict’ page removed from Wikipedia after five years”
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3. Location and Access Locate sources (intellectually and physically) Find information within sources What topics are related to your question? What keywords will you use when looking for information? Books – Title, Table of Contents, Index Online – Search Box, Strategies (+, “_”) Databases – Full text, images, related sites
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Books How do you select a book that will have information on your topic? What if there is no book specifically about your topic?
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Encyclopedias Provide brief descriptions of many well-known topics. If your topic is specific, you may have to look under a broader topic. How are print encyclopedias organized? How do you find information about a person? What if the letter I am looking for is not on the book?
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Online Resources Databases Search Engines Evaluating web sites. Evaluating web sites.
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4. Use of Information Engage (e.g., read, hear, view, touch) Extract relevant information Scan to find information on your topic. Read to get a general overview. Look for images, videos, and links to more information. If you find a good source, make a source card. Start taking notes on a note card. Include source # and page numbers.
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Note Taking Note Cards Source# Topic Paraphrase, summarize, use quotes
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Citations Citations MLA format Citation Machines Source/Bibliography Cards – numbering Works Cited Page
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5. Synthesis Organize from multiple sources Present the information Sort information by topic. Create a thesis statement. Grab the reader with something interesting. Organize supporting information. Make a conclusion. Include a Works Cited page. How will you present the information? Paper, presentation; text, graphics & video.
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6. Evaluation Judge the product (effectiveness) Judge the process (efficiency) Did you answer the question? Did you make your product interesting to the audience? Did you give your work credence by using authoritative sources? Is it technically sound? Spelling, punctuation, capitalization, format? Compare to the rubric. What could you do better next time?
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