A+ Writing Guide
A+ Writing Guide
Heres help!
Step by Step - guide to researching and writing
a paper
This is your printable copy of an online resource provided by: the Internet Public Library http://www.ipl.org/teen/aplus/
A+ Research & Writing for high school and college students is a copyrighted work of Kathryn L. Schwartz, 1997. All rights reserved. These documents may be distributed as long as it is done entirely with all attributions to all organizations and authors. Commercial distribution is strictly prohibited. Portions of this document may be copyrighted by other organizations.
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Table of Contents
Step by Step Research & Writing
Why the Step by Step Approach? Step 1 - Getting Started - preparing for the assignment and getting ready to choose a topic Scheduling Your Project - a worksheet Step 2 - Discovering and Choosing a Topic - reading to become informed Step 3 - Looking for and Forming a Focus - exploring your topic Step 4 - Gathering Information - which clarifies and supports your focus Step 5 - Preparing to Write - analyzing and organizing your information and forming a thesis statement Step 6 - Writing the Paper - writing, revising and finalizing
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3 4 8 9 11 13 15 17
Info Search
Where's the Information? Learning to Research in the Library Learning to Research on the Web Skills for Online Searching Information Found--and Not Found--on the Web Search Strategy: Getting a Broad Overview of a Subject Search Strategy: Finding Specific Information 20 21 35 40 43 47 49 51 53
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These activities take more time and require different skills than the final step-writing the paper. And many students haven't had a lot of formal training in how to do research and prepare information for writing a "research paper." Librarians provide a lot of help to students in the exploring, finding and organizing phases of their writing projects. They've done research on how students approach these tasks, how they feel while they're doing them, and what kinds of activities lead to a successful research paper (Kuhlthau, 1993 and 1994). The paper is your final product, but a research paper involves an extensive process before you can generate the product. The Step by Step section will guide you through this process from getting the assignment to writing the paper.
is the goal!
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Hey wait a minute! Why should I care about how I'm feeling during this whole process? There's an old saying, "Misery loves company." If you know how other students feel as they go through the research and writing process and you feel about the same way, you'll know your project is right on track! Thoughts and Actions: Follow the steps below to get an idea of things you should be thinking about and doing, and some of the strategies which will help. Note the type of information search you should be doing at this stage. Info Search
Your information search at this stage involves getting a "bird's eye" view of possible topics, browsing for ideas and finding out what kind of sources (print, electronic and internet) might be available to you on various topics.
Issue Analysis
that of a neutral observer more than an advocate for a particular position. The success of the paper is often based on how completely and clearly the writer has identified the key aspects of the issue and their significance to the field to which they relate. Advocacy or Persuasion A research paper may involve taking a stand on an issue and defending it against opposing points of view. The student will research the issues and read others' arguments for and against. The paper will anticipate and deflect arguments against the position, while presenting supporting evidence in favor of the position. Success will depend on how persuasively the paper makes its case and defends against possible opposition.
There's also a quick reference list of different types of papers with short descriptions of each type at the Houston Community College Systems Library, available at its Web site, (http://www.hccs.cc.tx.us/Library/TipSheets/Essay.html). See also our links (p 51) to Common Types of Papers and Papers on Special Subjects for articles on the unique aspects of various types of essays and research papers. Be sure you understand what kind of a paper you've been asked to write, since the approach you'd take could be vastly different, depending on the purpose of the paper and the expectations of your instructor!
The page Scheduling Your Project (p. 8) will help you set time deadlines for yourself.
1.7 Jot down your questions and ideas about possible topics
Use your notebook to starting recording questions which interest you or ideas for possible topics. If you're researching a paper for a 20th century American history class, write down questions you wonder about: Why did the stock market crash in 1929? Who was the worst 20th century American President? Did the Cigarette Smoking Man from X-Files really kill JFK?
You'll end up with a list of ideas and musings, some of which are obviously ridiculous and not reasonable topics for your paper, but don't worry about that at
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this point. Think about things which interest you and which build upon some experience or knowledge you have or build upon things you're presently learning in class. Also see the links to Reading Techniques and Journal Writing (http://www.ipl.org/teen/aplus/linksplanning.htm#reading) for tips on how to use a journal to help you in researching and writing a paper.
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Step by Step Research & Writing Step 1 - Getting started: planning the process Step 2 - Discovering and choosing a topic Step 3 - Looking for and forming a focus Step 4 - Gathering information: detail research Step 5 - Preparing to write Step 6 - Writing and revising *Suggested times for each step
The suggested percentages of time are to give you an idea in general how you may want to divide up your time between now and the time your paper is due. As you can see, the research steps are projected at 60% of the total time, while writing is 40%. Depending on how complex your topic is and how much you know about it at the beginning, your time could be more or less heavily weighted toward research versus writing. As you work through the Step by Step approach, you will find that you'll need time for reading and research at almost every step. This means a trip to the library, or an internet session on your computer, so be sure to plan enough time for those activities. Also, the whole process works best if you have time for reflection, thinking--time for you to put the project aside and "sleep on it." If you possibly can, build these times into your schedule. Your paper will be a better product and you are likely to be happier with the whole process.
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Thoughts and Actions: Follow the steps below to get an idea of things you should be thinking about and doing, and some of the strategies which will help. Note the type of information search you should be doing at this stage. Info Search
Your information search at this stage might be viewed as "surveying the territory." Instead of the birds' eye view you took at first, picture yourself piloting a helicopter, at times soaring over the landscape, then hovering for awhile over an interesting area and maybe even dipping down for a closer look.
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2.2 Continue thinking and jotting down questions and ideas in your notebook
As you read, ideas and questions may strike you - write them down, or you'll lose track of them. Look for issues which interest you, which arouse your curiosity or your passion (no, not that kind of passion, unless it's a human sexuality course). Consider the audience for your research paper: what kinds of things have been discussed in class that seemed to interest the class and the instructor? What kinds of issues were touched upon but could use further study and elaboration? Here is advice from Colgate University on this process: Write down all the ideas that occur to you--the brilliant insights, the stupid questions, the complaints, the emotions, the reactions, the things you're reminded of--everything. (Typically these ideas will crowd into your head as you write out your answers to the prewriting tasks. Instead of pushing them aside, forgetting them, or telling yourself that they are irrelevant, write them down. Later you may find relevance to things that at first seemed immaterial.) (http://www2.colgate.edu/diw/model.html) Also see the links to Planning and Starting the Writing Process (p. 52), especially the Ideas section and Reading Techniques and Journal Writing.
2.3 Info Survey - what print and electronic resources are available?
When you've narrowed your choices down, make a quick survey of the research resources which will be available to you on each potential topic. How much information seems to be available in your library's catalog? If it's a current topic, is there information in newspaper and magazine indexes and are those newspapers and magazines held by your library? Is there much authoritative information on your topic on the internet? Is the available information slanted to one side of an issue versus another? How much work will it take to get the information you need if you choose a particular topic?
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Thoughts and Actions: Follow the steps below to get an idea of things you
should be thinking about and doing, and some of the strategies which will help. Note the type of information search you should be doing at this stage.
Info Search
Now that you have a topic, you need to learn about it! Instead of piloting a helicopter over the landscape, you're now on the ground. Picture your topic as a square mile of land. Your task is to explore it, which will require going around, over and through it several times to see what's there, looking at it from different perspectives.
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Now you'll be using the library's online catalog, online indexes and the Web search engines along with the reference room and the subject-based Web directories. Learn how in the Info Search section (p. 20).
browse through them to get suggestions for focusing and narrowing your topic.
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Thoughts and Actions: Follow the steps below to get an idea of things you should be thinking about and doing, and some of the strategies which will help. Note the type of information search you should be doing at this stage. Info Search
Your information search at this stage is focused and specific, and you're keeping a careful record of what you find. Instead of the square mile of land to explore, you've roped off half an acre. You're walking it systematically, bending down now and then to pick up something and chuck it in your backpack, then recording in your notebook what you found and where you found it.
Now is also the time to learn the details of using search engines. Many of the sources you will want to use are online, whether in the library or on the internet. See the Info Search section (p. 20) and specifically the Skills for Online Searching article (p. 40).
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Thoughts and Actions: Follow the steps below to get an idea of things you
should be thinking about and doing, and some of the strategies which will help. Note the type of information search you should be doing at this stage.
Info Search
Don't turn in your library card yet. Be prepared to go back to your information sources to fill in any gaps you find as you analyze and organize your information prior to writing.
organization you will use in your discussion. A thesis sentence is not a statement of accepted fact; it is the position that needs the proof you will provide in your argument. Your thesis should reflect the full scope of your argument--no more and no less; beware of writing a thesis statement that is too broad to be defended within the scope of your paper. The article from which this quote is taken also gives some excellent examples of thesis statements for papers in various disciplines. See the Hamilton College article and others in the Links section for Thesis statement (p. 52). Another way to summarize the nature and function of the thesis statement is that it is a single sentence, usually in the first paragraph of the paper, which: declares the position you are taking in your paper, sets up the way you will organize your discussion, and points to the conclusion you will draw.
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Thoughts and Actions: Follow the steps below to get an idea of things you
should be thinking about and doing, and some of the strategies which will help. Note the type of information search you should be doing at this stage.
Info Search
Get to know the OWLs - the Online Writing Labs - from universities all over the country. Many colleges have put information online to help both the students enrolled in writing courses and students who have to research and write for other courses. The OWLs' online handouts cover almost every conceivable aspect of writing, from grammar and punctuation to choosing a title for your paper.
6.1 Think about the assignment, the audience and the purpose
To prepare for writing, go over once more the requirements of the assignment to make sure you focus your writing efforts on what's expected by your instructor. Consider the purpose of the paper, either as set forth in the assignment, or as stated in your thesis statement--are you trying to persuade, to inform, to evaluate, to summarize? Who is your audience and how will that affect your paper? What prior knowledge can you assume the audience has on the topic? What style and tone of writing are required by the audience and the assignment--informal, scholarly, first-person reporting, dramatized?
Read the linked articles that discuss Audience and Tone (http://www.ipl.org/teen/aplus/linkswritingstyle.htm#audience). Also, look at the articles about the structure and purpose of different kinds of papers--Common Types of Papers and Papers on special subjects (p. 51)--to make sure your writing goals are clear to you.
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6.4 Know how to use your source materials and cite them
See the section Citing sources on the Links page (p. 52). There's also a nice section on using sources in the middle of another article entitled Writing a General Research Paper (http://www2.rscc.cc.tn.us/~jordan_jj/OWL/Research.html) from the Roane State Community College OWL (Henley, 1996). The section, "What Happens When the Sources Seem to be Writing My Paper For Me?" describes how to break up long quotations and how to cite an author multiple times without letting the author take over your paper, and it links to both the MLA and the APA style requirements for partial quotations, full quotations, indented quotations, in-text quotations, and paraphrasing.
Congratulations! You made it through all the steps to researching and writing an paper. We hope your instructor agrees!
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Info Search
Wheres the information?
Searching for information today is both easier and harder than it was when your only choice was the library and its massive card catalog. More information is available than ever before, and you can access information from across the country or around the world. But finding what you want requires more skill on the part of the researcher, mainly because the human intermediaries--the reference librarian and the skilled cataloguer/indexer--are largely absent from cyberspace. This means that you, the researcher, need to understand where information is most likely to be found, how it's organized and how to retrieve it effectively using computerized search tools. The reference librarian is an invaluable resource to help teach you and advise you, but won't be there when you're searching Yahoo at midnight on the weekend before your paper's due. Here are several articles to get you started: Learning to Research in the Library (p. 21) Learning to Research on the Web (p. 35) Skills for Online Searching (p. 40) Information Found--and Not Found--on the Web (p. 43) Search Strategy: Getting a Broad Overview of a Subject (p. 47) Search Strategy: Finding Specific Information (p. 49)
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online. Note also that most items are classified under one or two very specific subject headings, rather than under many subjects. The keyword field of a library catalog generally searches several fields in the database record--the author, title, and description fields. The description is any information about the catalogued item which may have been entered by the cataloguer. This is not the full text of the book, nor is it an abstract (summary) of the book but rather a short paragraph containing information the cataloguer thought would be helpful to a user. This is not like searching for keywords in an indexed database like Alta Vista on the internet, where every word in a document has been recorded. For this reason, keyword searching alone could miss an item pertinent to your research project if the keyword you use was not included in the short paragraph written by the cataloguer. It's best to use a combination of keyword searching and subject-field searching to make a comprehensive search of the library catalog. Searching other libraries' catalogs There are lots of library catalogs on the internet--but so what? You can search the catalog of a library in Timbuktu, but that doesn't get you the book. Remember that library catalogs do not have full text of books and documents but are just a database with descriptions of the library's holdings. There are a few, and will be more, actual online libraries where you can go to read or search full text documents. Just don't confuse these special resources with a library catalog, which is very different. See Reference Sources on the Web (p. 51) for links to online books.
Find out how to search for journals and newspapers at your library
Most libraries have either print, CD-ROM, or online (either in the library or sometimes on the Web) indexes of magazine, journal and newspaper articles (referred to as periodicals) available for users. Some of these are abstracts of the articles, which are short summaries written to describe the article's contents in enough detail so that a reader can decide whether or not to seek out the full text. Some of these sources may be in the form of full text, where the entire articles have been entered into the database. The databases will include particular periodicals published within a span of time (for example, a popular newspaper index goes back 36 months for certain major newspapers). Know what the database you're searching contains and whether it's represented as abstract or full text. Get some pointers from the reference librarian about how to search that particular database, and build on what you've learned about search syntax and search techniques from Skills for Online Searching (p. 40).
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Note that these resources, whether print or digital, contain information about periodicals which may not be held by your library. If the database does not have full text articles, you may find an article right on point to your topic, but that particular newspaper or journal may not be in your library's collection. There are ways to get these articles, the fastest ways involving paying a fee to a company in the business of providing articles to researchers! Check out your options with the reference desk if you need an article that's not in your library's collection.
Bibliography surfing
Web surfing is finding an interesting Web page and then using the hyperlinks on that page to jump to other pages. If you find the first page interesting, chances are youll also be interested in the pages the author has chosen to link to. Librarians and researchers have been doing this for a long time, in the print medium. Its a valuable tool for identifying sources on your chosen topic. What you do is use the bibliography provided at the end of an encyclopedia article, journal article or book that youve found particularly pertinent to your topic and follow the bibliographic references much as you would hyperlinks on the Web. Since youre locating items which influenced the author of the original article and to which he or she referred, theyre likely to be on point to your topic. Then use the bibliography at the end of those cited articles to find even more items, and so on.
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200 Religion
210 Natural theology 220 Bible 230 Christian theology 240 Christian moral & devotional theology 250 Christian orders & local church 260 Christian social theology 270 Christian church history 280 Christian denominations & sects 290 Other & comparative religions
400 Language
410 Linguistics 420 English & Old English 430 Germanic languages German 440 Romance languages French 450 Italian, Romanian languages 460 Spanish & Portuguese languages 470 ltalic languages, Latin 480 Hellenic languages, Classical Greek 490 Other languages
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M - Music
ML - Literature of Music MT - Musical Instruction
B - Philosophy, Psychology
B-BD - Philosophy BF - Psychology BH - Esthetics BJ - Ethics BL-BX - Religions, Mythology
N - Fine Arts
NA - Architecture NB - Sculpture & Related Arts NC - Graphic Arts ND - Painting NK - Applied Arts NX - The arts in general
Q - Science
QA - Mathematics QB - Astronomy QC - Physics QD - Chemistry QE - Geology QH - Natural History QK - Botany QL - Zoology QM - Human Anatomy QP - Physiology QR - Bacteriology
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R - Medicine
(various)
G - Geography, Anthropology
G-GF - Geography, Travel, Atlases GN - Anthropology, Ethnography GR - Folklore GV - Sports
S - Agriculture
(various)
H - Social Sciences
HA-HJ - Economics HM-HQ - Sociology HX - Communism, Socialism, Anarchism
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This handbook serves as a comprehensive guide to American literature, including historical aspects, writers' biographies, awards, societies and trends. The Statesman's Year Book. Edited by John Paxton. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1864- . Annual. A section on international organizations, then a listing for individual countries containing statistical information and facts about political and economic aspects of the country (like welfare and education systems, financial institutions, diplomatic missions and so on). The World Almanac and Book of Facts. New York: Funk & Wagnalls, World Almanac, 1868-1976, 1886- . Annual. Similar to Information Please Almanac but presented in a more formal style - facts, tables of statistics, information about popular culture and events, with detailed table of contents and index. May also be on CDROM in your library.
Biographical sources
Reference sources with biographical information may provide a brief summary of data about a person, fairly detailed information about a person, or references (citations) to other short or full-length biographies written about the person. Brief summaries are usually found in biographical dictionaries, while other biographical sources and some encyclopedias may have more detailed information. Some cover living people and some dead people, a few cover both. Biography and Genealogy Master Index. 2d ed. Detroit: Gale, 1980- . Annual. [Also on CD-ROM] There are no actual biographies here but citations telling where to find biographies, whether short summaries or full-length books. McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of World Biography. 12 vols. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1973. Specifically designed to meet the needs of high school and college students by choosing to cover people who are frequently featured in the curriculum. Features people who are living as well as dead, and the biographical information is quite detailed. Study guides in the last volume identify important people who were associated with particular historical events or issues. Webster's New Biographical Dictionary. Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1988. 1130 p. Summarized biographies of important people of the past, source for quick facts.
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Who's Who, 1994. London: Adam and Charles Black, 1994. 2120 p. International version with brief biographical information for living people. Who's Who in America, 1995. 49th ed. 3 vols. New Providence, NJ: R.R. Bowker/Reed Reference Publishing, 1994. One of many "Who's Who" and "Who Was Who" sources offered by several different publishing houses. Some focus on ethnic groups, some on historical figures, some on groups such as artists or politicians. Check your library to see which sources are available.
Dictionaries
Standard dictionaries give an alphabetical list of words and their definitions, but there are several useful variations also classified as dictionaries. Thesauri contain synonyms and antonyms (opposites) but usually don't define the words. Dialect and slang dictionaries present words and definitions not necessarily found in standard dictionaries. There are also dictionaries of abbreviations and acronyms and dictionaries of quotations. We haven't listed specific examples here, because you'll probably just want to browse your library's collection. These general dictionaries are usually shelved near each other in the reference room. There are also quite a few dictionaries available in CD-ROM and on the Web.
Encyclopedias
Encyclopedias traditionally provide comprehensive coverage of an entire area of knowledge. There are general encyclopedias and subject encyclopedias, and they differ as to the level of detail provided and the complexity of the writing. Encyclopedias are good for fact-finding, getting general background information about a subject or starting a research project. The many CD-ROM encyclopedias contain much of the same information as the print volumes, as well as being searchable and giving you the ability to print out text and pictures. The CDROM versions and the many subject-based encyclopedias are not separately listed here--check with your library's reference department to see what they have available. At this writing, complete encyclopedias are not available for free on the Web. Academic American Encyclopedia. 21 vols. Danbury, Conn.: Grolier, 1993. Presents fairly brief articles on specific topics, with a clear, concise writing style. More factual information than broad overviews of large subject areas. Collier's Encyclopedia. 24 vols. New York: Macmillan, 1993.
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One of the "big three" adult encyclopedias typically found in public and academic libraries. Scholarly and comprehensive coverage. Encyclopedia Americana. International ed. 30 vols. Danbury, Conn.: Grolier, 1993. Another of the "big three" mixes shorter articles with long articles broad in scope. In length and scholarship, compares to Britannica. New Encyclopaedia Britannica. 15th ed. 32 vols. Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1993. Considered by many to be the premier English-language general encyclopedia. The writing is scholarly and therefore sometimes difficult to understand in a subject area with which you're unfamiliar. Articles in the Micropaedia are short and fact-filled, while the Macropaedia has long articles surveying broad aspects of a topic. Very extensive list of bibliographic references at the end of each article so you can find additional information. World Book Encyclopedia. 22 vols. Chicago: World Book, 1993. Aimed at students, this is very widely used in both public and school libraries. Coverage is provided for all subjects in the U.S. school curriculum, and articles have lots of cross-references to other articles within the encyclopedia and to outside sources. Study guides help to organize research on various topics. This is an excellent place to start when you're totally unfamiliar with a subject area.
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books of "descriptors" to help you search for key words and key concepts by which the items have been indexed. Be aware that indexes will contain items not held at your library, because they are prepared by commercial companies that index a particular group of periodicals or works regardless of where they may be held. A periodical index is most useful if it contains abstracts--brief summaries of the articles. Abstracts make it easier to tell if the article is relevant to the subject of your research.
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may not be held by your library. If you find an interesting item in a bibliography, consult your library's catalog to see if it's available in the collection.
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Most search engines index all the text found on a Web page, except for words too common to index, such as "a, and, in, to, the" and so on. When a user submits a query, the search engine looks for Web pages containing the words, combinations, or phrases asked for by the user. Engines may be programmed to look for an exact match or a close match (for example, the plural of the word submitted by the user). They may rank the hits as to how close the match is to the words submitted by the user. One important thing to remember about search engines is this: once the engine and the spider have been programmed, the process is totally automated. No human being examines the information returned by the spider to see what subject it might be about or whether the words on the Web page adequately reflect the actual main point of the page. Another important fact is that all the search engines are different. They each index differently and treat users' queries differently (how nice!). The burden is on the searcher to learn how to use the features of each search engine. See the links to Search Engines (p. 51) and to sources which have done evaluations of the various features of Web directories and search engines (http://www.ipl.org/teen/aplus/linksother.htm#interpret). Read an excellent article about search engines: Searching the Internet Part I: Some Basic Considerations and Automated Search Indexes in InterNIC News, September 1996, by Jack Solock (Solock 1996 A) at: http://rs.internic.net/nic-support/nicnews/archive/september96/enduser.html Also see the Web and internet tutorials (http://www.ipl.org/teen/aplus/linksother.htm#web) for additional online articles.
specialist, who writes a description to assist the user. A subject guide attempts to provide a selection of sites relating to a particular subject which represent high quality resources, thus representing the highest level of human intervention of the three types because it involves building a collection of sites to represent a subject area. Mr. Solock categorizes the following resources: Yahoo, BUBL and Galaxy as subject catalogs, Magellan, Lycos Top 5%, and InterNIC Directory of Directories as annotated directories and Argus Clearinghouse and the WWW Virtual Library as subject guides. Read his article, "Searching the Internet Part II: Subject Catalogs, Annotated Directories, and Subject Guides" at http://rs.internic.net/nic-support/nicnews/oct96/enduser.html for more good information about directories (Solock 1996 B). See the links to Web directories (p. 51) and to sources which have done evaluations of the various features of Web directories and search engines (http://www.ipl.org/teen/aplus/linksother.htm#interpret).
aplus/linksother.htm#web) for links which will supplement the information below. URLs Understand the construction of a URL. Sometimes a hyperlink will take you to a URL such as http://www.sampleurl.com/files/howto.html. You should know that the page "howto.html" is part of a site called "www.sampleurl.com." If this page turns out to be a "not found" error, or doesn't have a link to the site's home page, you can try typing in the location box "http://www.sampleurl.com/" or "http://www.sampleurl.com/files/" to see if you can find a menu or table of contents. Sometimes a file has been moved or its name has changed, but the site itself still has content useful to you--this is a way to find out. If there's a tilde (~) in the URL, you're probably looking at someone's personal page on a larger site. For example "http://www.bigsite.com/~jonesj/home.html" refers to a page at www.bigsite.com where J. Jones has some server space in which to post Web pages. Navigation Be sure you can use your browser's "Go" list, "History" list, "Back" button and "Location" box where the URL can be typed in. In Web research, you're constantly following links through to other pages then wanting to jump back a few steps to start off in a different direction. If you're using a computer at home rather than sharing one at school, check the settings in your "Cache" or "History list" to see how long the places you've visited will be retained in history. This will determine how long the links will show as having been visited before (i.e., purple in Netscape, green in the A+ site). Usually, you want to set this period of time to cover the full time frame of your research project so you'll be able to tell which Web sites you've been to before. Bookmarks or favorites Before you start a research session, make a new folder in your bookmarks or favorites area and set that folder as the one to receive new bookmark additions. You might name it with the current date, so you later can identify in which research session the bookmarks were made. Remember you can make a bookmark for a page you haven't yet visited by holding the mouse over the link and getting the popup menu (by either pressing the mouse button or right clicking, depending on what flavor computer you have) to "Add bookmark" or "Add to favorites." Before you sign off your research session, go back and weed out any bookmarks which turned out to be uninteresting so you don't have a bunch of irrelevant material to deal with later. Later you can move these bookmarks around into different folders as you organize information for writing your paper--find out how to do that in your browser.
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Printing from the browser Sometimes you'll want to print information from a Web site. The main thing to remember is to make sure the Page Setup is set to print out the page title, URL, and the date. You'll be unable to use the material if you can't remember later where it came from. "Saving as" a file Know how to temporarily save the contents of a Web page as a file on your hard drive or a floppy disk and later open it in your browser by using the "file open" feature. You can save the page you're currently viewing or one which is hyperlinked from that page, from the "File" menu or the popup menu accessed by the mouse held over the hyperlink. Copying and pasting to a word processor You can take quotes from Web pages by opening up a word processing document and keeping it open while you use your browser. When you find text you want to save, drag the mouse over it and "copy" it, then open up your word processing document and "paste" it. Be sure to also copy and paste the URL and page title, and to record the date, so you know where the information came from. Be prepared to cite your Web references Find out what form of bibliographic references your instructor requires. Both the MLA and APA bibliographic formats have developed rules for citing sources on CD-ROM and the internet. Instructions for citing electronic sources are available at many libraries, including the Purdue University Online Writing Lab (http://owl.english.purdue.edu/Files/110.html).
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documents about library schools you could be getting documents about school libraries or documents where the word library and school both appear but have nothing to do with a library school. Proximity This allows the user to find documents only if the search terms appear near each other, within so many words or paragraphs, or adjacent to each other. It's a pretty sophisticated tool and can be tricky to use skillfully. Many times you can accomplish about the same result using phrase searching. Capitalization When searching for proper names, search syntax that will distinguish capital from lower case letters will help narrow the search. In other cases, you would want to make sure the search engine isn't looking for a particular pattern of capitalization, and many search engines let you choose which of these options to use. Field searching All database records are divided up into fields. Almost all search engines in CDROM or online library products and the more sophisticated Web search engines allow users to search for terms appearing in a particular field. This can help immensely when you're looking for a very specific item. Say that you're looking for a psychology paper by a professor from the University of Michigan and all you remember about the paper is that it had something about Freud and Jung in its title. If you think it may be on the Web, you can do a search in Alta Vista, searching for Freud AND Jung and limit your search to the umich.edu domain, which gives you a pretty good chance of finding it, if it's there.
chosen some words, phrases and concepts which represent the subject matter of the document and has attached those to the database record as "descriptors." The specific terms usually come from a book of terms used by that database producer, to promote consistency between indexers. The indexer, or possibly the author of the article, has written an abstract or summary of the article's content which is included in the database. Again, it's important to realize that you're not searching the entire text of the document but someone's representation of the document. If you can zero in on some of the database's descriptors which accurately describe the topic you're looking for, you can easily retrieve all the articles with the same descriptors. If you do a keyword search in this type of database without checking the permissible descriptors, you're hoping that the indexer will have used your keyword in the summary or that the author will have used it in the title of the article. Full text of a document Searching full text documents gives you a good chance of retrieving the document you want, provided you can think of some key words and phrases which would have been included in the text. The problem is retrieving too many documents when you're looking for something particular, because common words and concepts can appear in documents irrelevant to your topic. This is one of the problems with internet search engines which index the full text of Web pages. The more skilled you can become in your use of search syntax, the greater will be your success in finding relevant information in a full text database.
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A lot of information is posted by educators as part of their teaching or sharing information with colleagues.
An educator or student with an interest in sharing information may write an article and post it as part of his or her personal web site. Generally, these are unpublished articles--if an article is going to be or has been published in a scholarly journal, the journal may own the copyright and the author can't post it without permission. College professors also post information that they're using for a class. Sometimes if they've authored a textbook, you can find chapters or portions of chapters on a class web site. College students and, increasingly, high school students post information about projects they've done for classes. If part of the assignment was designing a Website for the information, the information and the site may be quite sophisticated and useful.
Personal pages, pages that people post for their own personal satisfaction, can have surprising value.
This includes hobby pages, home pages, "fan" pages and any other pages posted out of the goodness of someone's heart. The internet has traditionally been a
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place for people to share what they know with other interested people, without looking for personal gain. Though there's a lot of commercial activity on the Web now, the tradition of sharing continues among individuals. There are some outstanding personal pages with good information on such things as astronomy, cooking, ethnic history, medical conditions, auto leasing, you name it. There are "fan" pages with volumes of information on someone's "favorite author" or "favorite movie star." A lot of these are frivolous, but many people are "fans" of classic authors like Edgar Allen Poe or Jane Austen and have posted terrific information about those people and their works.
Since the Web became a hot advertising and public relations medium, many businesses have established sites to promote their company and its products.
These commercial sites provide a lot of good information, because it helps interest people in visiting their site and keeps them coming back. For example, some of the investment companies which sell mutual funds have a lot of general investor-education materials available at their sites, including interactive calculators for computing your retirement needs or college savings needs.
More and more magazines and newspapers are providing excerpts from their current and past issues online,
and some magazines provide additional content related to the current issue which isn't in the print version. (Clever--when you buy the print version and find out there's more at the Web site, you have to go there, and then you get zapped with the advertising banners!) Ok, there's a pattern here. The commercial sites will post information that they think will enhance their online or real world business, build their public relations goodwill, or will draw people to the Web site where they can either make money from advertising or deliver another sales pitch for a product. It's usually pretty interesting stuff, because it's meant to be, and some of it can be useful to a researcher. It's actually pretty amazing to see some of the huge commercial databases such as phone directories, yellow pages, business locators (complete with door to door directions), stock tickers, and news update services which are available free on the Web. Only time will tell if the companies providing those services feel they are getting enough "bang for the buck" to keep going--no one knows for sure if anybody is making a profit on the Web or getting enough PR value for what they're spending. There's also a growing list of free e-zines and e-journals, which are published only online, and many of these have excellent information for research.
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index and abstract services (very labor-intensive to produce but are essential to a scholarly researcher looking for journal articles and therefore very profitable to sell to libraries) books that are still under copyright full-text nonfiction books on scholarly topics most scholarly journal articles (this is changing) pre-1994 (pre-Web) magazine and newspaper articles (this may change)
If you look at the list of what's not on the Web, it covers about 90% of the contents of a college library's collection, both the reference and the circulating collection. It's apparent that researchers still have to spend a good portion of their research time in the library rather than on the Web.
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On the internet
To get a broad overview of a subject on the internet, browse the subjectclassified "Web directories" such as Yahoo, BUBL and Magellan (see Links for Research -Web directories, p. 51, for links to these and others). Note how the subject is broken down into subcategories, to see how information in that subject is organized and what some of the issues are. Be sure to spend some time following the links to examine the pages and sites which have been listed. Often, it is difficult to determine just how comprehensively a subject is covered by looking at the number of sites. Many thousands of Web pages have little actual content and are mainly links to other pages, which may be links to other pages, and so on ad infinitum. Following the links through to actual pages is like browsing the library shelves and pulling books off the shelf to skim the contents. Run a quick search using one of the search engines. Once you feel you're familiar enough with the subject that you've identified some key words or concepts, use them to do a test search to see what kind of result you get. Look at both the quantity and the quality of the first few pages of hits to get some idea of how easy or difficult it may be to research that subject in more depth on the internet if you choose it as your topic. (See Links for Research - Search Engines, p. 51, for links to a number of search engines.)
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On the internet
Ask your reference librarian how he/she would approach a search for your topic on the internet. Most reference librarians, especially subject specialists, have done a lot of internet research and may have a pretty good idea of how successful you'll be in researching your particular topic there. Consult a subject-oriented directory on the internet. Now that you've zeroed on a specific topic, you can find out whether it falls in the categories identified by the people (like Yahoo) who classify sources on the internet. If your topic happens to fit neatly into one of the subcategories used by a directory, you may be able to find links to information simply by browsing the directory.
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Choose a search engine and make sure you know its search syntax (see Skills for Online Searching, p.40). Do a couple of quick, preliminary searches to test how easy or tough it's going to be to get quality information on your topic. Construct an appropriate search term or phrase and try it. Let the engine search the whole Web and see how many hits you get, then quickly scan the first few pages of hits. Try adjusting your search term using Boolean operators, synonyms or truncation and run it again--count the hits and look at the first few pages. Evaluate your quick searches. If you get many thousands of hits with the terms you used, and the first few pages of hits have a lot of items unrelated to your topic, then look at the advanced search features of the engine you're using to see if you can focus the search better. In the search engines which also include subject classifications, you may be able to limit your search to a particular subject area. Review your search terms in light of the irrelevant hits to see if you can revise your search terms for a better result. Redo your search until you've done the best you can. Then start browsing the pages of hits and following the interesting ones. Often if you can find at least one good page that's on point to your topic, it will contain some links to other, similar pages and you'll be off and running. If you decide to switch search engines, remember to change syntax. Each search engine has its own syntax, so what worked in one won't necessarily work in the others (more details in Skills for Online Searching, p.40).
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Planning and starting the writing assignment http://www.ipl.org/teen/aplus/linksplanning.htm The writing process -- ideas -- journal writing -- overcoming obstacles The topic http://www.ipl.org/teen/aplus/linkstopic.htm Several articles from the OWLs Title, introduction and conclusion http://www.ipl.org/teen/aplus/linkstitle.htm Several articles from the OWLs Thesis statement http://www.ipl.org/teen/aplus/linksthesis.htm Articles from many points of view Organizing information http:///www.ipl.org/teen/aplus/linksorganizing.htm Taking notes -- outlining -- organizing by cubing, mapping and more Writing style and technique http://www.ipl.org/teen/aplus/linkswritingstyle.htm Audience and tone -- logic and developing arguments -- sentences, words and phrases -- paragraphs -- coherence, clarity, conciseness -- transitions -- gender-fair writing -- writing on the computer -- other style and technique issues Citing Sources http://www.ipl.org/teen/aplus/linkciting.htm Paraphrasing, summarizing and plagiarism -- using quotations -- styles of citation Grammar and punctuation http://www.ipl.org/teen/aplus/linksgrammar.htm Links to grammar handbooks Revising and rewriting http://www.ipl.org/teen/aplus/linksrevising.htm How to proofread, edit and revise -- short proofreading and editing checklists -- critiques and peer review
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Bibliography - Sources
Bopp, Richard E. and Linda C. Smith (1995). Reference and Information Services: An Introduction. 2nd ed. Englewood, Colorado: Libraries Unlimited. Henley, Jennifer-Jordan (1996 A). "Writing a General Research Paper." Roane State Community College Online Writing Lab [Online], available at http://www2.rscc.cc.tn.us/~jordan_jj/OWL/Research.html. Hord, Bill (1995 A). "The Research Center." Houston Community College Systems Library [Online], available at http://www.hccs.cc.tx.us/Library/Center.html. Hord, Bill (1995 B). "Steps in the Research Process." Houston Community College Systems Library [Online], available at http://www.hccs.cc.tx.us/Library/Center/Lobby/Steps.html. Kuhlthau, Carol Collier (1993). Seeking meaning: A process approach to library and information services. Norwood, NJ: Ablex Publishing. Kuhlthau, Carol Collier (1994). Teaching the library research process (2d ed.). Metuchen, NJ: The Scarecrow Press. Lamm, Kathryn (1995). 10,000 Ideas for Term Papers, Projects, Reports & Speeches. New York: Macmillan. Solock, Jack (1996 A). "Searching the Internet Part I: Some Basic Considerations and Automated Search Indexes," InterNIC News, September 1996, available at http://rs.internic.net/nicsupport/nicnews/archive/september96/enduser.html. Solock, Jack (1996 B). "Searching the Internet Part II: Subject Catalogs, Annotated Directories, and Subject Guides," InterNIC News, October 1996, available at http://rs.internic.net/nic-support/nicnews/oct96/enduser.html. Williams, Sharon and Laura Reidy. "Introductions and Thesis Statements." Hamilton College, NesbittJohnson Writing Center [Online], available at http://www.hamilton.edu/academic/Resource/WC/Intro_Thesis.html.
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