Introduction to Research
On this page:
- Your research topic
- Finding books, articles and other materials
- Evaluating resources
- Citing sources
Your research topic
Analyse your topic and identify main concepts or keywords. Find synonyms and related terms for each of concept or keyword. Combine similar concepts or keywords by using OR between them. Combine dissimilar concepts or keywords by using AND between them.
Example: Use of social media tools in higher education.
(Social media OR facebook OR twitter) AND (higher education OR university)
Finding background information
Encyclopedias and dictionaries: You can find subject-specific encyclopedias and dictionaries in .
Finding books, articles, and other materials
Find books:
Find
Find streaming video:
Identifying scholarly or peer-reviewed journals
You can verify if a journal is scholarly or peer-reviewed by looking up the journal title in .
Evaluating resources
When using a book, article, report, or Web site for your research, it is important to gauge how reliable the source is.
- Author or creator: What are the author's credentials (educational background, past writing, experience) in this area?
- Year of publication: Is the source current or out of date for your topic?
- Publisher: Is it a university press or a large reputable publisher?
- Intended audience: What type of audience is the author addressing? Is this source too elementary, too technical, too advanced, or just right for your needs?
- Is the author's point of view objective and impartial? Is the language free of emotion-rousing words or bias?
Citing sources
When writing a research paper, it is important to cite the sources you used in a way such that a reader could find them. Use the same bibliographic style throughout your paper. A bibliographic management tool, , automates the referencing process.