How
do I Start My Research?
(Based
on Cornell University's "Seven
Steps of the Research Process")
- Identify and develop
your topic.
- It is usually
helpful to state your topic as a question. For example:
"What are the similarities and differences between
the secondary education system in Britain and the United
States?".
- Once you have
identified your topic, brainstorm for all the keywords you
can think of that are associated with your topic. In the
above topic, keywords might include the following: similarities,
differences, comparison, contrast, high schoool, secondary
education, Britain, England, United Kingdom, United States.
- Find background
information.
- Look up your
keywords in the indexes to subject
encyclopedias and other reference books. These will
give you some solid background information on your topic,
and may also help you come up with other keywords to look
for. Also pay attention to the bibliographies or list of
references at the end of articles, as these may help you
find other sources for your research.
- Use ALCUIN
(the library catalog) to find books.
- Use keyword
searching for a narrow or complex search topic.
- Use subject
searchingto help you narrow down a broad subject.
- Print out or
write down the citation (author, title,etc.) and the location
information (call number and library).
- Note the circulation
status.
- When you pull
the book from the shelf, USE THE INDEX AND TABLE OF CONTENTS
to locate specific pages of useful information.
- Use research databases
or print indexes to find citations and abstracts for journal
and newspaper articles.
- You can find
general article databases by clicking "ARTICLES"
on the library home page.
- For more subject-specific
databases, click "RESEARCH
BY SUBJECT" from the home page, select the
subject of your class, and go to the research databases
section of that page.
- For additional
help selecting periodical databases, ask at the Reference
Desk.
- If the article
is not fulltext online in your database, check ALCUIN
to see if Furman subscribes to the Journal, and if so,
what format your volume is in (microfiche, microfilm,
bound or current.) If we do not subscribe to the journal,
check the
list of journals that are fulltext online in our
databases.
- If you can't
find it that way either, and you have a couple of weeks
until the assignment is due, request it on interlibrary
loan. Start your research EARLY to allow time
for this process.
- Find Internet
resources, then track down the primary sources they are based
on.
- If you can't
find the original sources, be sure you evaluate
the web sites carefully before deciding whether or not to
use them in your project.
- Evaluate ALL of
your resources.
- Cite
what you find using a standard format.
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