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The Research Process

Holliston High School Library

 

Five Steps To Effective Library Research

 

              I.      Identify and Test Your Topic

            II.      Find Background Information

          III.      Find Resources

         IV.      Evaluate What You Find

           V.      Cite What You Find

 

 

 

I. HOW TO IDENTIFY AND TEST YOUR TOPIC

 

A. IDENTIFY A TOPIC.

 

State your topic idea as a question. For example, if you are interested in finding out about use of tobacco by high school students, you might pose the question, “What effect does use of tobacco have on the health of high school students?”

 

Identify the main concepts or keywords in your question. In this case they are tobacco, health, and students.

 

B. TEST YOUR TOPIC.

 

Test the main concepts or keywords in your topic by looking them up in the appropriate background sources or by using them as search terms in the subject area of Athena.

 

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II. HOW TO FIND BACKGROUND INFORMATION

 

Once you have identified the main topic and keywords for your research, find one or more sources of background information to read. These sources will provide you with information to help you to understand your selected topic. The most common background sources are print encyclopedias and dictionaries from the reference collection, their online equivalents.

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III. HOW TO FIND RESOURCES

 

·        Books

Use the Athena search tool in our School Library – searchable by title, author, or subject.

 

Search the Minuteman Library Network  @ http://www.mln.lib.ma.us/

The network is searchable by title, author, subject and keyword.

 

  • Magazine Articles

 

Search Infotrac, an online magazine index. It is located on the desktop of all networked computers @ the "Library Research Tools" icon. Go to Infotrac, and link to General Reference Gold. Enter your topic and view results.

 

Check out the online links from the High School Library Web Site @

http://www.teacherweb.com/MA/HollistonHighSchool/Library/

 

Make use of the many search engines available on the Internet .

 

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IV. HOW TO EVALUATE WHAT YOU FIND(YOUR RESOURCES)

 

  • Books – the Five “W”s – Who, What, Why, When, for  Whom

 

            Who wrote the book?

            What type of information can be in the book?

            Why was the book written?

            When was the book written?

            For whom was the book written?

 

 

·        Web Sites/Pages

 

            Who wrote/created the site?

Can you contact him or her?

            Why was the site created? What is the purpose?

            Is the information accurate?

How detailed is the information?

Are there any dead links on the page?

When was the site produced/updated?

 

 

 

 

         V.      HOW TO CITE WHAT YOU FIND

 

          Web Sites :

 

            Bibliographies: MLA Format

            http://www.english.uiuc.edu/cws/wworkshop/MLA/bibliographymla.htm

 

            A+ Rsearch & Writing Links(Internet Public Library)

            http://www.ipl.org/teen/aplus/links.htm

 

            Online Citation Styles(MLA, APA, Chicago, CBE, & Others)

            http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/online/citex.html

 

            The Writing Center at Michigan Tech

            http://www.hu.mtu.edu/wc/resources.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

           

 

 

           

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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