Writing Analytically, 6th Edition - Rosenwasser, David & Stephen, Jill [203]
Citing sources isn’t just about acknowledging intellectual or informational debts; it’s also a courtesy to your readers, directing them how to find out more about the subjected cited.
Before you settle in with one author’s book-length argument, use indexes and bibliographies and other resources to achieve a broader view.
URLs with domain names ending in .edu and .gov usually offer more reliable choices than the standard .com.
When professors direct you to do bibliographic research, they usually are referring to research done with indexes; these are available in print, online, and CD-ROM formats.
In evaluating a website about which you don’t know much, try “backspacing” a URL to trace back to its authorship or institutional affiliation.
Tell your readers in the text of your paper, not just in citations, when you are using someone else’s words, ideas, or information; rewording someone else’s idea doesn’t make it your idea.
Always attach a quotation to some of your own language; never let it stand as its own sentence in your text. Attribution—“According to Walden”—before the quote fulfills this function nicely.
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Assignments: A Research Sequence
The traditional sequence of steps for building a research paper—or for any writing that relies on secondary materials—is summary, comparative analysis, and synthesis. The following sequence of four exercises addresses the first two steps as discrete activities. (You might, of course, choose to do only some of these exercises.)
1. Compose an Informal Prospectus. Formulate your initial thinking on a subject before you do more research. Include what you already know about the topic, especially what you find interesting, particularly significant, or strange. This exercise helps deter you from being overwhelmed by and absorbed into the sources you later encounter.
2. Conduct a “What’s Going on in the Field” Search, and Create a Preliminary List of Sources. This exercise is ideal for helping you to find a topic or, if you already have one, to narrow it. The kinds of bibliographic materials you consult for this portion of the research project depend on the discipline within which you are writing. Whatever the discipline, start in the reference room of your library with specialized indexes (such as the Social Sciences Index or the New York Times Index), book review indexes, specialized encyclopedias and dictionaries, and bibliographies (print version or CD-ROM) that give you an overview of your subject or topic. If you have access to databases through your school or library, you should also search them. (See the section in this chapter entitled Electronic Research: Finding Quality on the Web.)
The “what’s going on in the field” search has two aims:
1. to survey materials to identify trends—the kinds of issues and questions that others in the field are talking about (and, thus, find important)
2. to compile a bibliography that includes a range of titles that interest you, that could be relevant to your prospective topic, and that seem to you representative of research trends associated with your subject (or topic)
You are not committed at this point to pursuing all of these sources but rather to reporting what is being talked about. You might also compose a list of keywords (such as Library of Congress headings) that you have used in conducting your search. If you try this exercise, you will be surprised how much value there is in exploring indexes just for titles, to see the kinds of topics people are currently conversing about. And you will almost surely discover how narrowly focused most research is (which will get you away from global questions).
Append to your list of sources (a very preliminary bibliography) a few paragraphs of informal discussion of how the information you have encountered (the titles, summaries, abstracts, etc.) has affected your thinking and plans for your paper. These paragraphs might respond to the following questions: