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Craft of Research, 1

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Assemble them into an acceptable, cogent whole. Value of Research ... Organize them into a cogent whole (BI) Report reliably and persuasively (as librarian) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Craft of Research, 1


1
Craft of Research, 1
2
Use of research, pubic private
  • From the researchers point of view - a craft
  • Research is carefully planned
  • May not know precisely what ones looking for,
    but know in general the kinds of materials needed
  • How to find them
  • How to use them
  • Assemble them into an acceptable, cogent whole

3
Value of Research
  • For the neophyte researcher, helps one understand
    the material
  • More distantly, skills of research of writing
    will help you in your career
  • As a (very modest) researcher,
  • Helping others gather resources (reference),
  • Organize them into a cogent whole (BI)
  • Report reliably and persuasively (as librarian)

4
Your multiple roles
  • Understand the production of research
  • Writing, research techniques, statistical
    methods, argumentation, interpretations and
    alternatives
  • The referee process
  • Printed and online versions

5
Your multiple roles
  • As a librarian (or other info professional) you
    should be aware of the physical traits of
    resource documents on retrieval
  • Surrogates, controlled vocabularies, thesauri
  • Full-text retrieval (IR)
  • Abstracts and abstracting services
  • How these issues affect ones ability to
    retrieval relevant documents
  • Novel trends in some fields (e.g.,
    bioinformatics, bibliomining)

6
Your multiple roles
  • Communication impact of
  • Writing styles (on consumer research,
    recommending research reports, IR)
  • Expectations by domain (scientific research
    techniques vs. humanities techniques)
  • Graphic communication
  • Statistical communication

7
Your multiple roles
  • Learn to critique research establish a base of
    perspective and rationale
  • Yet be sensitive to the influences pressures on
    researchers
  • Look for alternative interpretations
  • Encourage others to do the same.

8
Your multiple roles
  • Understand the various applications of research,
    depending on role and location (and whether the
    activity really is research)
  • Library administrators
  • Librarians as faculty
  • Librarians as practitioners
  • Other info professionals needs
  • Public (non-academic)
  • Students (academic libraries)

9
Thinking in Print (chapter 1)
  • Why conduct research?
  • Reliable published research
  • Write to remember
  • Write to understand
  • Write to gain perspective
  • What do you think?

10
Connecting with the Reader
  • Conversations among researchers
  • Precise writing reflects the researchers
    judgment about the reader compare this with the
    editors p.o.v
  • Intended audience
  • Social roles (cf. The library applications
    mentioned above)

11
Connecting with the reader
  • Researchers create their own role (research
    activities, writer, intentions in sharing the
    work)
  • Understand the intended reader choice of journal
    to publish the work
  • Prestige
  • Intended audience
  • Expectations of readers knowledge

12
Reader concerns
  • Readers will want to know the significance of the
    problem (the so what factor)
  • You want them to accept new knowledge
  • And to change their beliefs about the issue
  • Booth provides a checklist for understanding your
    reader (pp. 26-27)

13
Asking Questions, Finding Answers
  • From Topics to Questions - well return to this
    theme several times
  • Researchers try to answer a significant question
  • Actually trying to pose and then solve a problem
    that others recognize as worth solving
  • Narrowing the topic to a researchable problem
    is not easy! See pp 37-38.
  • But research requires an actual question, not a
    topic

14
From topics to questions
  • When reading an article, can you fill in the
    blanks p. 44
  • The author is studying _______.
  • Because s/he wants to find out who/how/why
    ______.
  • In order to understand how/why/what _____.

15
From questions to problems
  • Research should discover, show, explain, and
    convince.
  • Turning practical problems into research problems
  • Is the problem actually significant?
  • There are two types of research pure and
    applied.

16
Before continuing
  • Well continue our look at research from the
    developing researchers perspective
  • Keep in mind these points addressed to
    researchers-as-authors when we examine them as
    part of the fountainhead of research reflective
    inquiry

17
From Questions to Sources
  • Review Ch. 5 and the Appendix - finding resources
    in libraries. Sources
  • Reference librarians
  • General encyclopedia and dictionaries
  • Bibliographic guides
  • Online catalogues (cards for historical
    collections)
  • Domain specific encyclopedia dictionaries
  • Specialized bibliographies
  • Guides

18
From questions to sources
  • Assignment 1 emphasizes finding resources in
    libraries - getting to know the lay of the land

19
From questions to sources
  • Librarians
  • Experts
  • Other people subjects
  • Printed resources
  • Primary
  • Secondary
  • Tertiary
  • Which has more research value and why?

20
Using sources
  • Careful notes! bibliographic data
  • Careful notes, redux!
  • For accurate summaries and abstracts
  • Get the context right
  • A work cited out of context is suspect
  • Anticipate claims, supporting claims, warrants,
    biases assumptions

21
Claims supporting them
  • Making good arguments
  • Part of a strategy of persuasion
  • good research makes explicit the
    cause-and-effect you claim x caused y because
  • Consider the readers questions (or the librarian
    patrons questions) and how the expression of the
    claim can be interpreted by human judges by IR
    systems

22
Claims supporting them
  • Making good arguments
  • The warrant
  • Key to persuasion
  • Great opportunity to mislead by accident or
    design
  • Is the warrant somehow qualified? Should it be?
  • Does the qualification affect interpretation?

23
Warrants
  • Quality of the warrant
  • False
  • Unclear
  • Inappropriate
  • Inapplicable
  • Discuss examples

24
Quali?cations
  • Does the research qualify the claim? If so, is
    there a complete, accurate, fair explanation of
    the
  • Rebuttals
  • Complete review of all relevant aspects of the
    problem? Does the author pick-and-choose
    evidence?
  • Concessions
  • Updated research on the problem
  • Corrected by other researchers acknowledge?

25
Quali?cations
  • Limiting conditions
  • Qualifications affect the generalizability of the
    research results.
  • Is the scope of the work also limited?

26
Preparing to draft, drafting revising
  • Before writing, authors try to gather all the
    evidence
  • Warrants
  • Objections to rebut
  • The literature review
  • What are your preliminary interpretations?
  • What are your alternative interpretations?
  • More importantly, does the research question get
    answered?!

27
Preparing to draft, drafting revising
  • Main points
  • Are the quotes, c., accurate
  • Is there a logical structdure to the argument
  • Dont be afraid to draft and revise a lot!
  • Because researchers construct carefully, we can
    deconstruct carefully.

28
Communicating visually
  • (Well return to this theme again.)
  • Visual evidence is intended
  • To be accurate
  • To be interpreted quickly
  • Common, tho, for some outlets to manipulate
    graphics to lie
  • See Tuftes works
  • More examples to follow from the literature and
    during the SPSS demo

29
Recap and conclusions
  • Whats the main points from the perspective of
    the
  • Researchers
  • Librarian (as facilitator)
  • Consumers of research (public and other
    researchers)
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