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Page 1: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

*British Topic

Page 2: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

A Research Paper is NOT…

•A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources

•A report that could be included in a general encyclopedia

•A matter of cutting and pasting together from different resources

•A result of one quick Database or Google Scholar search

Page 3: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

*Your own analysis of information discovered from peer reviewed resources

*A chance to teach yourself something new

*A chance to demonstrate to others what you have learned, organized in aprofessional, scholarly manner

Page 4: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

•Choosing and Narrowing a Topic •At a Glance-Gathering Info

•Thesis Statement •Letter •Action Plan-Outline •Sources

•Integrating Secondary Sources: Direct Quotation, Paraphrasing, Summarizing

•Works Cited Page •Rough •Peer-editing •Final •Presentations

Page 5: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

*General: Birds.

*Focused: The effect of deforestation on endangered bird populations in Paraguay.

*General: Nick in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby

*Focused: Symbolism associated with Nick concerning themes of love and redemption.

Page 6: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

•Answers the question, “What is this paper trying to prove to its audience?”

•Compresses the critical crux of your paper into one sentence.

•Conveys your main argument in a nutshell.

•Uses specific language and specific ideas. •Generates a multi‐faceted argument. •Appears in your paper’s introduction

Page 7: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

• A Research Paper will utilize statistics, report findings, and expert opinion to demonstrate/support your stance on the subject.

• You may want to incorporate the opposition to your topic into the essay and work on refuting their claims and dissenting views.

• Refutation means pointing out the problems with the opposing viewpoints, thereby highlighting your own position’s superiority.

Page 8: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

*Predict counterarguments

Example:

Your Argument: Organic produce from local Farmers’ Markets is better than store-bought produce.

The Opposition: Organic produce is too expensive.

Page 9: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

*Logos—the soundness of your argument: the facts, statistics, examples, and authoritative statements you gather to support your viewpoint.

*This supporting evidence must be unified, specific, adequate, accurate, and representative.

Page 10: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

*Pathos—the emotional power of language: appeals to readers’ needs, values, and attitudes, encouraging them to commit themselves to a viewpoint or course of action.

*Connotative language—words with strong emotional overtones—can move readers to accept a point of view and may even spur them to act.

Page 11: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

*Ethos—the credibility and integrity of the argument: you cannot expect readers to accept or act on your viewpoint unless you convince them that you know what you’re talking about.

*Come across as knowledgeable and trustworthy by incorporating logos and taking the opposing views into account.

Page 12: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

Precise note‐taking should help you avoid Precise note‐taking should help you avoid unintentional plagiarism, since you’ll keep unintentional plagiarism, since you’ll keep

secondary source information clearly distinct from secondary source information clearly distinct from your original your original

thoughts. If the idea is not common knowledge thoughts. If the idea is not common knowledge (“the sun rises and also sets”), or not the (“the sun rises and also sets”), or not the

product of your original thought processes, then cite product of your original thought processes, then cite it. it.

Tip: If in doubt, cite!

Page 13: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

When taking notes, be sure to cite your sources carefully (author, title, page numbers, publisher, publication date) and mention whether you are quoting the source verbatim (direct quotation) or summarizing a source’s ideas in your own words.

Page 14: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

Evidence/Support can be found in many ways: Which source would a reader find more

credible?The New York Timeshttp://www.myopinion.com

Which person would a reader be more likely to believe?Joe Smith from Fort Wayne, INDr. Susan Worth, Prof. of Criminology at

Purdue University

Page 15: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

Ask yourself the following questions to determine a source’s level of credibility:

When was the source published? What are author’s credentials? Who’s the intended audience? Is the argument balanced or does it show

bias and make unsupported claims, illogical conclusions, or inaccurate generalizations?

Lastly, what sorts of references does your source cite?

Page 16: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

*“CAAAR”=

*Currency

*Authorship

*Audience

*Argument

*References

Page 17: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

*Library Reserved Dates:

*Electronic Sources:

On‐line articles from our library’s subscription databases

*Print Sources:

Journal articles, books.

Page 18: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

•Peer‐Reviewed/Scholarly/Refereed sources are by professional experts in the field. Examples: Publication of the Modern Language Association, Cell, Journal of the American Medical Association.

•General‐audience sources are for non‐experts. They are written in non‐technical, accessible language. Examples: Cosmopolitan, Newsweek, Better Homes & Gardens, and many Google‐able and Yahoo‐able websites.

Page 19: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

Don’t misrepresent a quote or leave out important information.

Misquote: “Crime rates were down by 2002,” according to Dr. Smith.

Actual quote: “Crime rates were down by 2002, but steadily began climbing again a year later,” said to Dr. Smith.

Page 20: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

• For each source, you should establish the credibility of the material or person being cited.

• After each quote, you need to explain the material to the reader and then provide a response.

• By providing a response to the sourced material, you are integrating the support into your argument.

Mary Sherry, owner and founder of a research and publishing firm, finds that many writers who aim to publish their work are “inadequately suffering from grammar amnesia and are deluded by a desire to be famous” (515). By this, I think she means that many of the writers today have overlooked the importance of grammar and punctuation and simply want to be recognized. This supports my stance that many writing students today. . .

Page 21: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

*•NO dropped quotations or quoting without proper context presented by your own thoughtful phrasing.

*•NO traffic‐jam quoting or choo‐chootrain quoting where several direct quotations are strung together, one after another, without discussion.

Page 22: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

• Occurs when you conclude that a cause-effect relationship exists simply because one even preceded another.

• Example: A number of immigrants settle in a nearby

city.The city suffers an economic decline.The immigrants’ arrival caused the decline.[This is simply co-occurrence. There are most

likely other reasons for the decline.]

Page 23: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

*Linking two or more ideas that in fact have no logical connection.

*Example: She uses a wheelchair, so she must be unhappy.

[The second clause has nothing to do with the first.]

Page 24: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

*Attacking the qualities of the people holding an opposing view rather than the view itself.

*Example: Bill Clinton had extramarital affairs, so his views on global policy merit no attention.

[Do the ex-president’s marital problems invalidate his political views?]

Page 25: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

• Occurs when the argument fails to provide the credibility of the sourced material.

• Examples:Sources show…An unidentified spokesperson states…Experts claim…Studies show…

[If these people and reports are so reliable, they should be clearly identified.]

Page 26: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

*Involves failure to establish proof for a debatable point.

*Example: The college library’s funding should be reduced by cutting subscriptions to useless periodicals.

[Are some of the library’s periodicals useless?]

Page 27: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

• Implies that because two things share some characteristics, they are therefore alike in all respects.

• Example: Nicotine and marijuana involve health risks and have addictive properties.

“Driving while smoking a cigarette isn’t illegal, so driving while smoking marijuana shouldn’t be illegal.”

[By making this argument, you have overlooked a major difference between these two substances. Marijuana impairs perception and coordination—important aspects of driving—while there’s no evidence that nicotine does the same.]

Page 28: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

•Assuming that a complicated question has only two answers, one good and one bad, or both bad.

• Example: Either we permit mandatory drug testing in the workplace or productivity will continue to decline.

[Productivity is not necessarily dependent on drug testing.]

Page 29: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

• Introducing an irrelevant issue intended to distract readers from the relevant issues

• Example: A campus speech code is essential to protect students, who already have enough problems coping with rising tuition.

[Tuition costs and speech codes are different subjects. What protections do students need that a speech code will provide?]

Page 30: * British Topic. A Research Paper is NOT… A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general

*Substituting emotions for reasoning

*Example: She should not have to pay taxes because she is an aged widow with no friends or relatives.

[Appeals to people’s pity. Should age and loneliness, rather than income, determine a person’s tax obligation.]