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Research Assignments: The Details
What Types of Sources are Appropriate
- primary or secondary sources
- popular or scholarly articles
- government documents
- data/statistical sources
- editorials/opinion pieces
- crowd-sourced information
Terminology
- primary vs. secondary sources
- reference sources
- monographs vs. collected/edited volumes
- peer reviewed journals
- review articles or literature reviews
Sources to be Used or Avoided
NB try to be sparing with blanket prohibitions (e.g. "don't use Google or the web" )
- e.g. use PsycINFO to find a report of a clinical study
- e.g. use the Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy for information on
the life and work of W.V.O. Quine
- e.g. use OBIS/OhioLINK Library Catalog to find books or videos beyond class
readings
- e.g. don't cite Wikipedia as an authority
Confirm Resource Availability
- use reserve services when many students will need the same sources
- provide links to required or recommended sources when possible
- give complete citations to sources you expect students to locate independently
- indicate whether alternate versions or editions are acceptable
- verify holdings and access to key sources
- access to electronic books, journals, and databases can change without notice
Convey Expectations for the Finished Product
- indicate your preferred citation style
- format preference (e.g. hard copy, electronic or both)
- printing preferences (single or double-sided)
- file type preferences (.doc, .pdf, .xls)
- length (number of pages or word count)
- other preferences:
- margins, point size, image types, slide background, graphs/charts
Last updated:
September 19, 2013