18 Feb 2008 04:03:13 | Carson C. Day
So you want to learn to research well, and not waste any time.
Let's do it. Here are a few NECESSARY preliminary points.
First, adopt an aggressive I-am-taking-over-this-place mindset.
2. Develop a system for executing the research process. By
creating your own rules to follow systematically, you really
speed things up. Don't have one? No worries. You can use mine. I
happen to have "research animal" stamped on my forehead.
3. Follow the rules. You can tweek them to suit your own style
after a couple of runs with this method. But these make for
great training wheels.
4. Before going into battle, always ready your weapons.
Do not go near a library or desk to start research unless and
until everything you will need sits neatly arranged all about
you for quick access. This one is your call. I use 2 or 3 pens
and a pad of paper to scratch out notes and thoughts, and a pack
of index cards for especially important notes. Then come
the highlighters. In college, I used to work the highlighters
until they overheated.
Some people like sticky notes
(post-its). You can stick 'em all around you as you work. You
will want a rolodex and a phone nearby in case you have to call
someone you know to ask questions. For instance, if you have a
specially-gifted techie friend in your inner circle, or know a
professor, you may want to put him on speed dial. Think a bit
about anything else you might need. Some folks study and
research well to music, so get your headphones if you need them.
Okay, here we have the system lined up for you.
PART #1: Begin Reconnaissance. You're going in.
A. Get an overview and "contextualize" your topic. Learn its
timeline of events and the major historical factors associated
with it. When did it happen? What did it do? Why do people care
about it at all? Find a short article that outlines the history
of, or at least offers a timeline for, your topic. Everything
has a history, and gaining a quick overview of your topic's
chronology will give you the context into which all your other
sources will fit.
B. Next, ride the wave. This is the surfing and browsing stage.
Start with what you know. Pick out words associated with your
topic or subject and Google them. When you land a starting topic
(you can change this as you go, no worries. Just start
somewhere.), use online encyclopedias and other resources to get
a "quick snapshot" of the general views on the subject that
exist out there already. Try to see your subject from as many
angles as possible, as it were, "walking all the way round it,"
inspecting as you go. Ask questions in your head, or even out
loud like I do (caution: this may scare people), and put them
down on paper in a special spot. Slap a sticky note on it that
reads "QUESTIONS I HAVE."
To aid and abet developing a "snapshot overview," start looking
up books on the topic. Find 10 of them. Note the titles on maybe
50 books -- if you can find that many -- about your subject or
topic. Note the overlap in words used in the titles about your
topic. This will give you a quick idea about who or what this
topic means to others who have already studied it.
Next, read the bibliographies of books. One good book can give
you 5-10 great leads you might never have found otherwise. Note
the titles that show up repeatedly in different bibliographies.
In research geekspeak this is "bibbo," bibliographic overlap.
Bibbo identifies your IRT's -- Initial Research Targets.
Photocopy or print out from your IRT's: the table of contents;
the first chapter; a middle chapter that looks interesting or
helpful; and the final chapter. Then read these and highlight
the Dickens out of them. This gives you a snapshot, and a
working knowledge, of the entire book extremely fast. It works
too. Use your scribbled out question set as a filter for "what
to look for" -- and highlight or take notes on -- when reading
your IRT's. Write down any further questions that develop. These
can be as simple as "Who is that guy?" Let your curiosity guide
you, and let the sticky notes
FLY!!
Next, read journal and magazine articles. How do you find these?
Try checking your Bibbo. Or just follow any that you think might
land you somewhere interesting. Play the detective. Follow your
nose if you smell a good lead.
PART #2: Compile and organize your sources.
Use the old-fashioned vanilla file folders and mark them up, so
you know which is what. Then get a file box to keep
them handy.
PART#3: Determine which are the most relevant features of your
topic from its effects or imlplications in 3 different areas of
study. For instance, if your topic reads, "Interesting stuff
about World War II," then you will need to ask and study
questions like, "Who did it cost, and how much did it cost them,
to have this war?" Follow the money (economics). Then, you might
ask "How did this war change the mindset or values of American
society" (sociology or philosophy). Finally, ask maybe, "What
inventions did Europeans develop to fight this war?"
(technology).
By looking at your topic from at least three disciplinary
viewpoints, you will gain a broad understanding of it, and find
yourself -- somewhat suddenly -- asking GREAT questions about it.
PART#4: Find and choose a controversial feature of topic, and
choose a side of the issue.
Write down your viewpoint in one sentence. This we call your
"thesis." Arguing this point well now constitutes your
"objective." Ask the question of your thesis, "How do you know
this is the case?" Ask this three times. Each time you ask it,
give a brief answer in writing from one of your three areas you
chose. Each answer must reflect views formed from a different
area.
PART#5: Next, Re-read or skim your sources to develop an outline
(in order to support your three points offered in defense of
your thesis). Now pull out the photocopied (or printed out)
chapters from your IRT's and highlight and scribble all over
them -- but keep it legible. Argue your case vigorously with
your imaginary critic who knows what you know. Take his side and
argue against your thesis the best you can. Shoot it down,
developing three criticisms. Some of these will already have
circulated in print in your sources. Line them up. Then answer
the critic. Refute his three points. Your outline is nearly
finished.
PART #6: Organize your notes into subgroups listed under the
branches of your outline. Draw a picture of the flow of your
argument and objections as though it were a tree, and label the
parts. Modify the outline as needed. Add relevant subheadings
(you will come across new info in your scribbling) under the
branches of the outline. Fill out relevant details from your
notes to form the arguments for each section and subsection.
Your rough draft is now complete.
PART#7: Rewrite your rough draft 5 times using our rules of good
writing.
PART:#8 Study the cleaned-up draft for logical errors in
arguments. See our "Blogic For Writers" website for this; modify
and strenghten your case. Use T Edward Damer's "Attacking Faulty
Reasoning" for this too.
PART#9 -- Write your conclusion. This final paragraph spells out
"what important point or points you have learned from doing all
this hard work (e-search). Here, you make the case for why your
research has value. Also, here either write or rewrite your
introductory paragraph to "hint at" (anticipate) the concluding
paragraph. Most of the time it actually makes the best sense to
write your introduction LAST, since this way you write with a
view of the WHOLE work, which you did not have at the beginning.
In the introduction, hint at your conclusion, but don't give
away the whole story. This makes for a smooth and logical flow
from start to finish, giving your work a stylish symmetry, where
the first part foresees the end, and the end reflects on the
beginning. All good stories have this symmetry.
PART #10. Do the footnoting (or endnoting) and contstruct an
extensive bibliography. Add title page and Table of Contents.
See Kate Turabian's or an MLA manual online for this, and for
grammar and style. You can also use the resources we list in our
sidebar.
You are DONE. Your paper or article "so totally rocks," and you
get an "A." Your readers love you, and you then become wealthy
and famous. Your actual mileage may vary, batteries not
included, offer void where prohibited.
About Author :
Carson has written some 1.3 gazillion articles, many with
insightful, if alternative, viewpoints. He now writes for Ophir
Gold Corporation, and favored the history of ideas in college.