6. Doing the Research - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

6. Doing the Research

Description:

6. Doing the Research Ken 9610051A Nicky 9610903A Agnes 9610503A Jennifer 9810014E Edward 9610009A – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:189
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 58
Provided by: edut1402
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: 6. Doing the Research


1
6. Doing the Research
  • Ken 9610051A
  • Nicky 9610903A
  • Agnes 9610503A
  • Jennifer 9810014E
  • Edward 9610009A

2
6a What information to look for
3
  • 6a-1 Single-fact information
  • To answer specific factual questions.
  • 6a-2 General information
  • To provide an overview of a subject or a
    particular topic.
  • 6a-3 In-depth information
  • In-depth information be found in sources that
    a topic in detail.

4
6b Where to look for information
5
Ask your librarian about online databases.
6
Look up your topic in an outline encyclopedia.
7
Check the Library of Congresss online catalog
for books on your subject.
8
Consult Appendix B of this book for an annotated
listing of reference sources.
  • Please turn to our textbook p.229

9
Google is a good beginning.
10
Check the bibliography at the end of encyclopedia
articles.
11
  • Search the computerized library catalog under the
    subject heading as well as any suggested cross
    listing.

12
Check Book Review Digest for summaries of
reviewed book.
13
Check a standard dictionary or go to Dictionary.
com
14
Check Whos Who for information about noteworthy
people.
15
Consult gazetteers and atlases
16
General indexes
  • United States

  • History

  • 1865-1898
  • Custers Black Hills
    Expedition Cover story W. C. Patric. il
  • map por American History
    v38 no2 p34-42 Je 2003
  • 1961-1963
  • JFKs Second Term Excerpt
    from An Unfinished Life R.
  • Dallek.
    Atlantic Monthly (1993) v291 no5 p58-61, 64-6 Je
  • 2003

  • 1969-1974
  • Capers, Tapers, c. 30th
    anniversary of Watergate hearings
  • D. Frum. National Review
    v55 no11 p56 Je 16 2003

17
Specialized indexes
  • Specialized indexes catalog information on
    specific subjects.
  • Different specific subjects have their own
    indexes
  • Choose the right index on your subject

18
Using interviews and surveys
  • Interview is another important source of
    information.
  • Expert is recognized as an authority in a
    particular subject.
  • In addition, experts can be someone who has had a
    unique experience.

19
  • You have to establish experts credentials
  • to evidence he or she is an expert.
  • Judge whether he or she is an expert on your
    topic or not.
  • Do not use the interview of experts and
    eyewitness only.
  • Some research projects require surveys,
    especially in psychology and social sciences.

20
Corresponding by e-mail
  • E-mailing an expert and asking the right
    questions is an efficient way of getting
    information.
  • Be sure to identify yourself and your research
    project, and to ask specific, pointed question so
    that the expert knows what youre getting at and
    can answer quickly.

21
Attending lectures, concerts, or art exhibits
  • A famous lecturer, artist, or musician passing
    through your campus or town may be used as unique
    citation on your chosen topic.
  • Whatever you do, dont forget to make a
    bibliographic card linked to your notes so you
    can make accurate citation of the source when you
    write the paper.

22
6c Assembling a working bibliography
23
  • The process
  • 3x5 card
  • Name of authors
  • Title of work
  • Facts of publication
  • Pages of information
  • Location of source
  • Library call number

24
6d Selecting your sources Skimming
25
Here are some hints.
  • Glance at the preface.
  • Thats where the author usually recounts the
    major ideas.

26
  • Look up the subject in the index of the book.
  • You can easily see where is your source on
    which page.

27
  • Read the chapter headings.
  • Subheadings also can tell you the major ideas.

28
  • Read the first and last two sentences in
    paragraph.
  • To find out what information it contains.

29
  • Glance at the opening paragraph.
  • The authors thesis is stated in the first
    paragraph.

30
  • Glance at concluding paragraphs.
  • These final paragraphs sum up the major ideas.

31
  • Reading every fourth or fifth sentence.
  • To get a fair idea

32
Primary and secondary sources
33
  • Primary sources are original writings by an
    author, documents, artifacts, laboratory
    experiments, other data that provide firsthand
    info.

34
  • Secondary sources are writings, speeches, or
    other document about a primary sources.
  • Paper should consist of primary and secondary
    sources of evidence.

35
Evaluating sources
36
  • Choose sources that cover your particular subject
    in depth.
  • Choose only material that hits the proverbial
    nail on the head of your topic.

37
  • Recognize the point of view in sources..
  • The title and opening paragraph reveal the
    writers point of view.

38
  • Verify one opinion against another.
  • To check the opinion whether it is agreed with
    other experts.

39
  • Note the date of the evidence.
  • In researching topics, you should seek the
    up-to-date data that is the most important.

40
  • Exercise your editorial judgment.
  • Use your common sense and attention to evaluating
    the source of evidence.

41
  • Check your evaluations against those of
    professionals.
  • Researcher should check the author whether he/she
    is qualified for giving you evaluation or not.

42
  • Beware of statistics.
  • What the statistics we use are specific and
    concrete with credibility.

43
6e Note-taking
44
6e-1 Choosing the Number of Notes
  • The paper demands
  • a. Your opinionated conclusions
  • b. Evidence and other opinions supporting them

45
6e-2 Formatting the Note Cards
  • Use 46 cards
  • Write in ink
  • Write down only one idea on each card
  • Identify the source of the note
  • Jot down a general heading

46
6e-2 Formatting the Note Cards
sources
General heading
  • Fulop-Miller 3-10 Rasputins appearance
  • The content of your notes

4 6 Cards
47
6e-3 Using the Computer to Take Notes
  • Two approaches
  • a. Download material print it out
    highlight the passages
  • b. Keep electronic sources in the computer
    organize them by files transfer
    quotations by the tool of copy and paste

Attention please 1.Well-organized sources in
your computer! 2. How to keep track of your
source?
48
Well-organized sources in your computer
49
6e-4 Using a Copy Machine to Take Notes
  • Suggestions
  • Write down details about source immediately
    after copying it.
  • Be neat about the pages you copy

Much easier !
50
6e-5 Kinds of Notes
  • Four kinds of notes
  • a. The summary
  • b. The paraphrase
  • c. The quotation
  • d. The personal comment

51
  • a. The Summary
  • Condensation of significant facts
  • Common sense should govern your use of summary
  • (Figure 6-5 on Rasputin)
  • b. The Paraphrase (most common form)
  • The purposes of paraphrasing
  • It shows that you have mastered the material
  • It gives your paper a consistent style
  • (Figure 6-6 on Rasputin)

52
  • c. The quotation
  • If the quotation contains a misspelled or other
    errors, reproduce it faithfully, placing beside
    it sic
  • The rules to avoid overusing quotation
  • Limit quoted material to no more than 10 of the
    total paper
  • Quote only when the authority of the writer is
    needed or when the material cant be paraphrased
    or summarized
  • d. The personal comment
  • Your ideas conjectures conclusions
  • Stapling

53
Plagiarism and how to avoid it
  • Plagiarism is the act of passing anothers words
    and ideas as your own.

54
To avoid plagiarism you have to do the following
  • Provide a note for any idea borrowed from
    another.
  • Place quoted material in quotation marks.
  • Provide a bibliography entry at the end of the
    paper for every source used in the text or in a
    note.

55
The following must be accompanied by a citation
specifying author and source
  • Any idea derived from a known source.
  • Any fact or data borrowed from the work of
    another.
  • Any especially clever or apt expression, whether
    or not it says something new, that is taken from
    someone else.
  • Any material lifted verbatim from the work of
    another.

56
  • Any information that is paraphrased or summarized
    and then used in a research paper.

57
  • Thank you for your listening
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com