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The Craft of Research 4th Edition

The Craft of Research, Fourth Edition. 4th ed., University of Chicago Press, 2016.

Write while you research

Research is about developing a deep understanding of a topic by making surprising connections. Therefore, it’s important to write as you research. Don’t wait until you’ve gathered all the information to start writing. You might have fleeting thoughts that could provide really good insight into a topic. Make sure you’re taking note of those. Once you have your topic, the best way to start researching is to write down questions you have about it and find their answers (start with who, what, where, when, and why).

Don’t just accumulate random information on your topic. Make sure you’re writing down your thoughts and opinions, even if you don’t use them later on. Perhaps this is one of the most overlooked pieces of advice when it comes to research. It’s important to remember that if you thought about something, or had an interesting question, it is very likely that your audience will relate to that in some way. Make it part of your research if you deem it appropriate.

Keep your audience in mind

When you write for others, you demand more of yourself. What does your audience know? What might they need more information on? These are all questions to keep in the back of your mind as you’re researching. Put yourself in your audience’s shoes. Writing is an imagined conversation, and you want to make your audience a part of it. Talk WITH people, not DOWN at them or AT them. It’s easy to write from your own perspective, keeping in mind what you yourself know about a topic. To make a compelling case to others, you must think about the information that the audience should know about a topic before delving into it.

There are different types of research topics based on your intended goal / your audience’s needs.

3 types of research topics

What readers want

Can you meet your reader’s needs? What do they gain by reading your research?

Begin research with a question that interests you

<strong>Research question</strong>

Name Your Topic

“I am trying to learn about / working on / studying ______”

Add an Indirect Question

Because I want to find out who/what/where/when/whether/why/how ______”

Answer So What? By Motivating your Question (Significance)

In order to help my reader understand how/why/whether _____”

Keep in mind what kind of problem you are trying to solve:

Practical problems: What should we do?

Conceptual Problems: What should we think?

How to start researching

Backward citations can expand your research in a more coherent and holistic way. It wasn’t something I learned to do in school, but I apply it to every paper I’ve written since learning about it!

Resources

You want to make sure you are using credible resources. Here are a few the authors recommend:

Test your sources / engage with them more deeply

Drafting Checklist

Before you start writing your first draft, make sure that you can answer the following questions:

Planning and drafting

Exploratory drafting

Drafting

Now that you have your thoughts somewhat laid out, you want to make a more in-depth version of your initial notes.

Introduction

Body of your Paper

Plan Each Section and Subsection

Conclusion

AVOID

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