Overview
It's a good idea to keep detailed research notes throughout the process. This can often save lots of time in the end. You may want to use a tool to manage your citations and save your sources as you research, Zotero can help you do this.
Step 1: Identify your topic
Read more
Some questions to get you started
- With what topics are you already familiar?
- In what topics do you have a genuine interest?
- In what topics do you already have a strong opinion; positive or negative
Still can't think of a topic?
Consider:
- Brainstorming; write down any ideas that come to mind
- Talking with lecturers
- Talking with classmates
- Consulting sources like general and subject specific encyclopaedias (ahem, Wikipedia), handbooks, and textbooks for ideas
- Browsing recent issues of periodicals for current issues
Wikipedia: The Good and the Not So Good
Wikipedia is a great place to start your research, but not a great place to end it.
Strengths of Wikipedia
-
Wikipedia is updated frequently. New information can be, and often is, added to the site within minutes. Due to editorial limitations, scholarly encyclopaedias are usually updated annually.
-
Because Wikipedia crowd sourced, there is the potential for a broader authorship than is found in academic publications.
-
Citations in Wikipedia offer a wider array of materials, including articles and resources that are available for free and online.
Weaknesses of Wikipedia
-
Editors on Wikipedia are not necessarily experts. Authorship on Wikipedia is often anonymous or obscured.
-
Articles are always changing, making them difficult to cite in your research. An article you read today, may look quite different tomorrow.
-
Articles can be vandalised, providing wildly inaccurate information.
Review your assignment
Before you begin, make sure you understand your assignment and its requirements.
Consider:
- Length; How many words are required?
- Date Due; When is the paper due?
- Additional requirements; Are there any specific requirements for the assignment?
Step 2: Find background information
Read more
Use your textbook, class notes, reference books, Wikipedia, and/or a broad Google search to find information about the events, places, people and jargon associated with your topic.
- Identify keywords related to your topic.
- Search encyclopaedia and other general sources.
- Collect additional keywords that you can use to search later.
Encyclopaedia Britannica Online / Academic Edition
Wikipedia
{{@2#bkmrk-wikipedia%3A-the-good-}}
Step 3: Sources
Step 3.1: Search for your sources
Read more
See Where to find sources and How to search
Think of it like a healthy diet. You want a variety of high quality sources going into your research.
Step 3.2: Evaluate what you’ve found
Read more
Once you have a variety of sources (or as you're collecting them), it's time to evaluate them. There are several models and checklists for guiding researchers through the evaluation process, but all are asking the same questions.
ABC Checklist
Accuracy: Is the information correct and current?
- When was the information published or posted?
- Has the information been revised or updated?
- Does your topic require current information, or will older sources work?
- If it's an online source, are the links working and up-to-date?
Bias: Is the information fair and objective?
- What is the purpose of the information? Is it to inform, to teach, to sell, to entertain?
- Do the authors or sponsors make their intention or purpose clear?
- Is the information fact, opinion, or propaganda?
- Does the point of view appear objective and impartial?
Credibility: Is this source believable and trustworthy?
- Who is the author, publisher, source, or sponsor?
- What are the author's credentials or organisational affiliations?
- Is the author qualified to write on the topic?
- Is there contact information such as a publisher or e-mail address?
- What kind of reputation does the author, publisher, or website have? Search the Internet to see what other credible sources have to say about the resource that you are evaluating.
If you can't find an author or organisation listed, especially on a website, you should move on and look for another source.
This diagram illustrates the concept of authority, placing a number of sources on the spectrum from popular to scholarly.
Adapted from My Learning Essentials resources developed by the University of Manchester Library and licensed under CC BY-NC 3.0.
Step 3.3: Make notes
Read more
While doing your research you will be making connections and synthesising what you are learning. Some people find it useful to make "idea cards" or notes in which they write out the ideas and perceptions they are developing about their topic.
How to Work with Notes
- After you take notes, re-read them.
- Then reorganise them by putting similar information together. Working with your notes involves re-grouping them by topic instead of by source. Re-group your notes by re-shuffling your index cards or by color-coding or using symbols to code notes in a notebook.
- Review the topics of your newly-grouped notes. If the topics do not answer your research question or support your working thesis directly, you may need to do additional research or re-think your original research.
- During this process you may find that you have taken notes that do not answer your research question or support your working thesis directly. Don't be afraid to throw them away.
It may have struck you that you just read a lot of "re" words: re-read, reorganise, re-group, re-shuffle, re-think. That's right; working with your notes essentially means going back and reviewing how this "new" information fits with your own thoughts about the topic or issue of the research.
Grouping your notes should enable you to outline the major sections and then the paragraphs of your research paper.
Step 4 (if applicable): Compilation / Evaluation of Original Data
Read more
- For some research projects, you may have data that you have collected. Now is the time to compile and evaluate that data.
Step 5: Write your paper
Read more
- Narrow your original topic into a research question.
- Consider:
- Is the research question researchable in terms of the available timeframe and required resources?
- Is the research question too broad or too narrow?
Step 5.1: Cite your sources (as you write)
Read more
CitationProvidesisyourawritingcornerstonewithof scholarly communication; allowing dialog irrespective of space and time.credibility- Gives credit to the authors and materials you’ve used
ProvidesCitationyouriswritingawithcornerstonecredibilityof scholarly communication
For more information about citing and citations, see our guide on the topic.
Please note: FoB uses APA-style citations and FoAD uses Chicago-style citations.
Citing as you write saves a lot of time in the end!
Step 6: Proofread
Read more
The importance of proofreading cannot be understated.
Strategies to Help Identify Errors
- Work from a printout, not a computer screen. Besides sparing your eyes from the strain of glaring at a computer screen, proofreading from a printout allows you to easily skip around to where errors might have been repeated throughout the paper [e.g., misspelled name of a person].
- Read out loud. This is especially helpful for spotting run-on sentences and missing words, but you'll also hear other problems that you may not have identified while reading the text out loud. This will also help you adopt the role of the reader, thereby, helping you to understand the paper as your audience might.
- Use a ruler or blank sheet of paper to cover up the lines below the one you're reading. This technique keeps you from skipping over possible mistakes and allows you to deliberately pace yourself as you read through your paper.
- Circle or highlight every punctuation mark in your paper. This forces you to pay attention to each mark you used and to question its purpose in each sentence or paragraph. This is a particularly helpful strategy if you tend to misuse or overuse a punctuation mark, such as a comma or semi-colon.
- Use the search function of the computer to find mistakes. Using the search [find] feature of your word processor can help identify repeated errors faster. For example, if you overuse a phrase or use the same qualifier over and over again, you can do a search for those words or phrases and in each instance make a decision about whether to remove it or use a synonym.
- If you tend to make many mistakes, check separately for each kind of error, moving from the most to the least important, and following whatever technique works best for you to identify that kind of mistake. For instance, read through once [backwards, sentence by sentence] to check for fragments; read through again [forward] to be sure subjects and verbs agree, and again [perhaps using a computer search for "this," "it," and "they"] to trace pronouns to antecedents.
- End with using a computer spell checker or reading backwards word by word. Remember that a spell checker won't catch mistakes with homonyms [e.g., "they're," "their," "there"] or certain word-to-word typos [like typing "he" when you meant to write "the"]. The spell-checker function is not a substitute for carefully reviewing the text for errors.
- Leave yourself enough time. Since many errors are made and overlooked by speeding through writing and proofreading, setting aside the time to carefully review your writing will help you identify errors you might otherwise miss. Always read through your writing slowly. If you read through the paper at a normal speed, you won't give your eyes sufficient time to spot errors.
- Ask a friend to read your paper. Offer to proofread a friend's paper if they will review yours. Having another set of eyes look over your writing will often spot errors that you would have otherwise missed.