English 1006T
Prompt #9
23 October 2012

Reflecting on "research"

What this is about

An important thing I aim to help people learn in English 1006 concerns the kind of research that gives people access to the sorts of things you need to be able to find out about in university classes (as well as for pretty much any career you might want to be involved in). The assignment for today was created to give you experience in doing that kind of research. If you do not have a report of that process, a research diary, with you, you need to go do that. If you were not in class last time you need to read the prompts and other documents and do what you can to learn from the experience.

You'll remember that last time I suggested five possible "starting points" for finding out about the questions you asked.

Not surprisingly, the most popular starting point was #4: "Google and wikipedia." One of the important skills you can develop as you do this kind of research is to be able to anticipate which tools are most likely to offer the kind of material you're looking for. Since most people don't have experience with the other four, it stands to reason that most people would opt for those -- but of course there are only certain kinds of questions you're like to be able to address usefully there.

I'm hoping people can learn from each others' and their own experiences. To begin that, get back in the current working groups.

In class today

You should have with you a research diary, which includes, as the last prompt said,

a record of every step in your investigation -- where you looked, what search terms you used (even, or especially, the ones that didn't work). Make this a diary. Each step you take should be headed with the specific terms you used, and a sentence or two saying what you found there, and if you went further (looking at a particular text, or following a link).
Begin by reading everyone else's report, marking them up when you have questions or responses. Each group had at least one person starting with other databases that Google and Wikipedia (they're listed on the Web site); it will be important to read their diaries and make sure you've learned what you can from them. At the same time it's likely that people have learned things about searching for resources from the usual suspects.When everyone has read all of them, create two lists: If we have time we'll discuss some of these; I'll collect them, along with the research diaries, and post them on the Web site. At the same time, I'll distribute the next prompt.


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