Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface: The Aims of This Edition
- Introduction: Your Research and Your Audience
- I.1 What Is Research?
- I.2 Connecting with Your Audience
- I.3 Understanding Your Role
- I.4 Imagining the Role of Your Audience
- I.5 How to Use This Book
- ▶ Quick tip: A Checklist for Understanding Your Audience
- I Asking Questions, Seeking Answers
- Prologue: Planning Your Project—An Overview
- ▶ Quick Tip: Sustaining a Research Project Alone and in Groups
- 1 From Topics to Questions
- 1.1 From an Interest to a Topic
- 1.2 From Focused Topic to Research Question
- 1.3 The Most Significant Question: So What?
- ▶ Quick Tip: Finding Topics
- 2 From Questions to a Problem
- 2.1 Understanding Research Problems
- 2.2 Distinguishing Between “Pure” and “Applied” Research
- 2.3 Connecting Research to Practical Consequences
- 2.4 Finding a Good Research Problem
- 2.5 Learning to Work with Problems
- ▶ Quick Tip: Making an Opportunity of Inexperience
- II Sources and Resources
- Prologue: Sources and Authentic Research
- 3 Finding and Evaluating Sources
- 3.1 Understanding Three Types of Sources
- 3.2 Making the Most of the Library
- 3.3 Locating Sources Online
- 3.4 Evaluating Sources for Relevance and Reliability
- 3.5 Looking Beyond Predictable Sources
- 3.6 Using People to Further Your Research
- ▶ Quick Tip: Using Generative Artificial Intelligence
- 4 Engaging Sources
- 4.1 Recording Complete Bibliographic Information
- 4.2 Engaging Sources Actively
- 4.3 Reading for a Problem
- 4.4 Reading for Arguments
- 4.5 Reading for Data and Support
- 4.6 Taking Notes Systematically
- 4.7 Annotating Your Sources
- ▶ Quick Tip: Managing Moments of Uncertainty
- III Making Your Argument
- Prologue: Assembling a Research Argument
- 5 Making Good Arguments: An Overview
- 5.1 Argument as Conversation
- 5.2 Assembling the Core of Your Argument
- 5.3 Explaining Your Reasoning with Warrants
- 5.4 Acknowledging and Responding to Anticipated Questions and Objections
- 5.5 Planning Your Research Argument
- 5.6 Creating Your Ethos
- ▶ Quick Tip: A Common Mistake—Falling Back on What You Know
- 6 Making Claims
- 6.1 Determining the Kind of Claim You Should Make
- 6.2 Evaluating Your Claim
- 6.3 Qualifying Claims to Enhance Your Credibility
- ▶ Quick Tip: Make Your Claim Contestable
- 7 Assembling Reasons and Evidence
- 7.1 Using Reasons to Plan Your Argument
- 7.2 Distinguishing Evidence from Reasons
- 7.3 Determining the Kind of Evidence You Need
- 7.4 Distinguishing Evidence from Reports of It
- 7.5 Evaluating Your Evidence
- ▶ Quick Tip: Assess Your Evidence as You Gather It
- 8 Warrants
- 8.1 Warrants in Everyday Reasoning
- 8.2 Warrants in Research Arguments
- 8.3 Testing Warrants
- 8.4 Knowing When to State a Warrant
- 8.5 Using Warrants to Test Your Argument
- 8.6 Challenging Others’ Warrants
- ▶ Quick Tip: Reasons, Evidence, and Warrants
- 9 Acknowledgments and Responses
- 9.1 Questions About Your Research Problem
- 9.2 Questions About the Soundness of Your Argument
- 9.3 Imagining Alternatives to Your Argument
- 9.4 Deciding What to Acknowledge
- 9.5 Framing Your Responses as Sub-Arguments
- 9.6 The Vocabulary of Acknowledgment and Response
- ▶ Quick Tip: Three Predictable Disagreements
- IV Delivering Your Argument
- Prologue: Planning, Writing, and Thinking
- 10 Planning and Drafting
- 10.1 Why a Formal Paper?
- 10.2 Planning Your Paper
- 10.3 Avoiding Three Common but Flawed Patterns
- 10.4 Turning Your Plan into a Draft
- ▶ Quick Tip: Managing Anxiety as a Writer
- 11 Revising and Organizing
- 11.1 Thinking Like a Reader
- 11.2 Revising Your Frame
- 11.3 Revising Your Argument
- 11.4 Revising Your Organization
- 11.5 Checking Your Paragraphs
- 11.6 Letting Your Draft Cool, Then Revisiting It
- ▶ Quick Tip: Abstracts
- 12 Incorporating Sources
- 12.1 Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Quoting
- 12.2 Creating a Fair Summary
- 12.3 Creating a Fair Paraphrase
- 12.4 Using Direct Quotations
- 12.5 Mixing Summary, Paraphrase, and Quotation
- 12.6 Showing Readers How Evidence Is Relevant
- 12.7 The Social Importance of Citing Sources
- 12.8 Four Common Citation Styles
- 12.9 Guarding Against Inadvertent Plagiarism
- ▶ Quick Tip: Indicating Citations in Your Paper
- 13 Communicating Evidence Visually
- 13.1 Choosing Visual or Verbal Representations
- 13.2 Choosing the Most Effective Graphic
- 13.3 Designing Tables, Charts, and Graphs
- 13.4 Specific Guidelines for Tables, Bar Charts, and Line Graphs
- 13.5 Representing Data Ethically
- ▶ Quick Tip: Look for Opportunities to Include Visual Evidence
- 14 Introductions and Conclusions
- 14.1 The Common Structure of Introductions
- 14.2 Step 1: Stating a Context
- 14.3 Step 2: Stating Your Problem
- 14.4 Step 3: Stating Your Response
- 14.5 Setting the Right Pace
- 14.6 Finding Your First Few Words
- 14.7 Writing Your Conclusion
- ▶ Quick Tip: Use Key Terms in Titles
- 15 Revising Style: Telling Your Story Clearly
- 15.1 Judging Style
- 15.2 The First Two Principles of Clear Writing
- 15.3 A Third Principle: Old Before New
- 15.4 Choosing Between the Active and Passive Voice
- 15.5 A Final Principle: Complexity Last
- 15.6 Editorial Polish
- ▶ Quick Tip: The Quickest Revision Strategy
- 16 Research Presentations
- 16.1 Presenting to Auditors
- 16.2 Giving a Preliminary Presentation
- 16.3 Giving a Final Presentation
- ▶ Quick Tip: Treat Your Presentation as a Performance
- V Some Last Considerations
- 17 The Ethics of Research
- 17.1 Your Ethical Obligation to Yourself
- 17.2 Your Ethical Obligations to Your Audience and Fellow Researchers
- 17.3 Research and Social Responsibility
- 17.4 A Final Thought
- 18 Advice for Teachers
- 18.1 The Risks of Imposing Formal Rules
- 18.2 On Assignment Scenarios: Creating a Ground for Curiosity
- 18.3 Accepting the Inevitable Messiness of Learning
- Our Debts
- Appendix: A Brief Guide to Bibliographic and Other Resources
- Index
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