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These lessons are designed to support the research you are asked to do in your various classes. Understanding the key concepts in these lessons will enhance your learning, as well as saving you time. Each one will take you about 20 minutes, perhaps a little longer if English is not your first language. EvidenceThis lesson was created by Barbara Kobritz, Instructional Services Librarian at TC3. Comments may be emailed to kobritb@tc3.edu In this lesson you will learn to:
Types of EvidenceWhen you are given assignments for papers and projects in your classes you will typically be asked either to inform your audience of the facts on your topic, or persuade your audience to a particular point of view. Either way, you will be making claims and you will need to back them up with evidence. Anecdotal & Research EvidenceYou will rarely hear researchers talk about proof. It’s very difficult to prove, for example, that one thing causes another. Instead we look for relationships between variables, i.e. evidence. This lesson is about two types of evidence, anecdotal evidence and research evidence. As you will see, for formal presentations one is preferred over the other. Anecdotal EvidenceAn anecdote is a story about an incident that happened in one situation. Anecdotal stories often appear in newspapers and newscasts because that is the news reporters’ job – to give us the story about an event that just happened. Keep in mind that events are news precisely because they’re unusual.
We also get anecdotal evidence from each other:
The Problem with Anecdotal EvidenceAnecdotal evidence causes us trouble when we generalize from one specific situation to all situations. If one person smokes and it doesn’t kill them, that doesn’t mean it’s safe for everyone.
For college-level writing, you are expected to use research-based evidence. You will usually find it in the form of articles published in scholarly journals, also referred to as academic journals or research journals.
You will also find research-based evidence reported in books and on web sites. The Structure of ResearchRegardless of what form (journal, book or web site) you find research in, it will be reported in a recognizable and consistent structure. The rest of this lesson is about how to recognize research. We are going to look at a sample article to see how the components of a published research report work together. Here is the citation for our sample article:
Structure of a Research ArticleWe’re going to look at seven different parts of a research article:
1. ReferencesAlthough the references come at the end of the article, they come at the beginning of the process. Researchers keep careful track of what is being published in their field, both to keep up on what’s being done, and to help them formulate a research question that hasn’t been done. Typically at the end of the article you’ll see a long list of other publications they have cited. Our sample article has a total of 60 references.
2. Problem StatementYou won’t always see a section clearly marked problem statement. The authors may start with something called Introduction or Background. But somewhere in there, they will tell you what they hoped to learn by doing this research. That’s the problem statement. Phrases like, The current study sought are a giveaway. In our article the very first sentence tells us why they did this study:
In other words, the researchers wanted to know whether witnesses who see a crime perpetrator for a longer time are more accurate in identifying the criminal later. AND, they wanted to know whether the longer exposure makes the witness feel more confident about the identification. (If witnesses feel more confident but aren’t actually more accurate…that would be a good thing to know, right?) 3. MethodologyA research piece will always specify the methodology, how the research was done.
In our example the methodology section is clearly marked: Method. This study had a very lengthy and complex methodology that involved exposing people to staged crimes, controlling the amount of time the subject saw the perp's face, followed by phony line-ups - all repeated for two different age groups. 4. Data or ResultsThere may be two separate sections called Data and Results, or just Results, as in this study. This is a description of the numerical outcome of the study. If the language is too technical for you to understand, don’t worry about it. Experts in the field examined the data before the study was published. 5. Conclusions or DiscussionThis section tells you what the researchers think is true as a result of the data they found. This section should be easier to understand than the data itself. For purposes of gathering evidence for a college-level paper - this is what you’re looking for. Our researchers found that, yes, witnesses who got a good look were more accurate at identifying criminals. Unfortunately, the longer look made them more confident, whether they were right or wrong. Interesting. 6. Suggestions for further researchThe researchers started by reviewing everything that had been written in this field of research. They formulated a question. They carried out their research and reported it. In the final section, they make suggestions for further research. This is how a community of scholars develops knowledge over time. In our study, there isn’t a clearly marked section for suggestions. Throughout the Discussion section the authors mention facets of the research that need further exploration. Some research articles have suggestions for further research and some don’t. 7. AbstractAlthough it’s the first thing you see, the Abstract is the last piece written, a summary of all the rest. Usually abstracts tell you the whole story. Try reading through this abstract and see if you can describe the problem, the methodology, the results and the discussion for our sample study.
The problem statement, the methodology, the results and the issues up for discussion are all outlined succinctly in that abstract. Using Research Articles EffectivelyCommunities of scholars in various disciplines carry on conversations, by means of their published research, that can go on for years or even decades. You can’t expect to understand the conversation by looking at a couple of articles you pull out at random. To get a good understanding of the research in your topic dig up as many articles as you can - 30, 40, 50, more - and read the abstracts. You will get a much better overview of the scholarly discussion than you could get by reading even one article from start to finish, in less time. Thinking about DisciplinesResearch is different in different disciplines. So far we have been talking about research in the social sciences, because much of the informative and persuasive writing you do in college will relate to these disciplines. But think about an article in a history journal. How do you think it would differ from our example about the accuracy of eyewitnesses? What about in a physics journal? How would the experimental design be different from a social science study like the sample article we’ve been exploring? What’s Your Discipline?By deciding to attend college and choosing a major you have started on the path to joining one of the many communities of scholars. You now have a discipline, whether it be education, environmental studies communication or any other program of study. Take advantage of the research and writing opportunities in your basic classes, such as English 101, to start exploring the scholarly literature in your discipline. Find out what your colleagues have been up to and prepare yourself to join the conversation. Summary
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