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FRENCH 705 - Grodek - Fall 2023

Research Skills Process

180703Writing Research Questions (created by theartofeducation.edu) Research questions help you stay laser focused on your passion. Questions should be specific, measurable, and realistic: Specific – what exactly do you want to accomplish? Measurable - how will you measure success? Realistic – is it possible to achieve? Here are some examples of research questions and how they rank. How would you revise these questions to ensure they are specific, measurable and realistic?  Too narrow: What is the number of students currently enrolled in art in our school district? Less narrow: How does the education level of arts specialists impact enrollment in art courses in our school district? Too broad: What are the effects of art on students’ long term academic success? More focused: How does enrollment in art courses correlate with academic performance in middle school students? Too objective: How much time do young students spend making art per day?  More subjective: What is the relationship between art making and academic success in math among elementary students? Too simplistic: How are schools addressing creative development in students?  More complex: What are the effects of interdisciplinary measures by classroom teachers incorporating art on a weekly basis among 4th grade students?

Conducting research worksheet

  1. Research Topic or Question

Write your research topic or question.

 ________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

  1. Key Concepts and Search Terms

Examine your research topic or question. What are the main concepts?

How can these concepts be expressed differently?

Sample topic: What is the impact of economic recovery on social services to the poor?

Search Terms

(main concepts + synonyms, alternate phrasing, abbreviations, etc.

Concept #1

economic recovery

Concept #2

social services

Concept #3

poor

or

not

or

not

  1. Preliminary Search Statement

Use the chart to help you create a search statement. As a general rule, incorporate no more than

2 or 3 concepts into the statement.

Use appropriate “boolean” connectors (and, or, not) to combine search terms and phrases.

Example: econom* and (social services or social policy) and (poor or poverty)

________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

  1. Determine the scope or limits of your research (how much of “the literature” am I searching through?):

         

  • Publication Dates:         ______________________________________________________

  • Language(s):         ______________________________________________________

 

Evaluate Your Sources

Start with established or seminal articles or works. Consult your supervisor for this information, and you can also connect with the Bibliographics Librarian to examine the 'important' publications/authors/topics in your discipline.

Evaluation Criteria:

- Content: what are the key contributions for the topic? What limitations should be noted? How does it relate to other works?
-  Accuracy: How comprehensive is the coverage? Are all sides covered?
- Authority: Who is the author and what are their credentials? To what extent is the work cited by others?
- Objectivity: Is there bias on the part of the publisher, author, organization, funder? Is the work fair, balanced and reasonable? Can you determine any conflict of interest?

Types of sources   

Document Type

Useful For

Find Using

Books

Overviews of topics

Catalogue (books, gov pubs)

WorldCat

Books @ Scholars Portal

Reference books

Introduction to a topic; overview of themes and methodologies

Catalogue (books, gov pubs)

WorldCat

Articles (scholarly and popular); Literature reviews

Latest research on a topic

Discovery (books, gov pubs, articles)

Databases e.g. Journals @ Scholars Portal, Social Sciences Abstracts, CBCA, CPI.Q

 Dissertations / Theses

Current; comprehensive literature reviews

Proquest Dissertations & Theses

MacSphere (McMaster’s Institutional Repository)

Conferences papers

Unpublished and forthcoming research

Web of Science database

Search Engines

Government information

Legislation, policies, reports, etc.

Catalogue (books, gov pubs)

WorldCat

Canadian Public Documents Collection

Search Engines

Statistics

Data

Statistics Canada

CANSIM database

Search Engines

Newspaper articles

Current information

CBCA, CPI.Q

Lexis Nexis, Factiva

Search Engines

Determine the resources you will use to conduct your research. Explore a Database.

  • What topics does it cover?
  • How many years does it cover?
  • Can I isolate review articles?
  • Can I search by a particular methodology e.g. participatory research?

How many databases will you need to search? This is dependent upon the scope of your research (research paper, formal literature review, systematic review, major research paper, Thesis, Dissertation, etc.), and on the multidisciplinarity of your research question. There are likely different disciplinary 'lenses' from which to look at your question. 

Database Features

Databases have their own accounts (called various things, such as profile, research page, account, etc) - sign up for these free accounts as they usually provide you with features that make your search process easier: 

  • Save Searches
  • Build the search from the saved search history
  • Search Alerts
  • Exporting to citation management tools
  • Share your results via email or RSS

Databases have their own thesauri and vocabulary (list of subject terms used to classify and organize information; shows relationships between terms) - using/understanding its vocabulary allows you to enhance your searching

Databases use Wildcards, Truncation, Proximity Searching and other tools -- using these helps you use the database at an advanced level. The "Search Tips" or "Help" will reveal these features. 

 

.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3687192/figure/F2/Subramanyam R. Art of reading a journal article: Methodically and effectively. J Oral Maxillofac Pathol. 2013 Jan;17(1):65-70. doi: 10.4103/0973-029X.110733. PMID: 23798833; PMCID: PMC3687192.

If you are dealing with more than a handful of citations in your reports, you should strongly consider using a bit of software called a reference or citation manager.

Citation management software (CMS) can help you collect and organize the items that you find when searching in databases, and it automates the process of creating your bibliography in your selected style when you're writing.


There are many citation management tools available, both paid and free, all with different strengths and weaknesses.

McMaster Libraries doesn't recommend any specific system, but we do have a citation management software comparison chart to help you choose from these three popular choices:

EndNote logoEndNote is available to current McMaster employees and students at no cost and consists of a website, browser plug-ins and desktop application (which can be synced across devices & with website). NOTE: A web-based citation management tool called EndNote Basic is free to anyone and has no desktop component. EndNote Basic has less storage and fewer features than EndNote. See this chart for details.

Mendeley logoMendeley is a free citation management tool that consists of  a website, browser extension and desktop application (which can be synced across devices & with website).
 

Zotero logoZotero is a a free citation management tool that consists of  a website, browser extension or bookmarklet, and desktop application (which can be synced across devices & with website).

 
Guides for each of these citation managers [linked above and in the left navigation pane] are also available to help you through the process of setting up a citation management system, adding references to it from a database, and using it with MS Word to format your bibliography.

If these three options do not meet your needs, you can view a much larger comparison chart on Wikipedia, which includes both free and fee-based alternatives.

I've created an Annotated Bibliography guide that should help you understand the expectations and processes involved in creating an annotated bibliography

https://libguides.mcmaster.ca/annotatedbibliography

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