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Finding and Evaluating Sources

Finding and Evaluating Sources. Powerpoint for Chapters 12 & 13. The Conversation. There are no new topics…so, before you know where to start researching, imagine the conversation about your issue… Who are the loudest voices? Who are the most frequent voices? Whose voices are not heard?

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Finding and Evaluating Sources

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  1. Finding and Evaluating Sources Powerpoint for Chapters 12 & 13

  2. The Conversation There are no new topics…so, before you know where to start researching, imagine the conversation about your issue… • Who are the loudest voices? • Who are the most frequent voices? • Whose voices are not heard? • What is the voice of sanity? • What voices are marginalized? • What is not being said?

  3. Invisible Children • Whose voices did we hear? Make a list…then ask: • Who are the most frequent voices? • Whose voices are not heard? • What is the voice of sanity? • What voices are marginalized? • Pay attention to how the conversation evolves…how has the conversation evolved over time?

  4. In-class writing assignment Think about the conversation surrounding your topic…make a list of the voices… • Who are the most frequent voices? • Whose voices are not heard? • What is the voice of sanity? • What voices are marginalized? • Pay attention to how the conversation evolves…how has the conversation evolved over time?

  5. How to Frame a topic • Helps you figure what is inside the frame and what is outside the frame. • Example…try to frame this topic: Cheating on exams in college.

  6. How to Focus the topic • Articles will help you here • OSCAR/Find an Article • Directory of Open Access Journals • Google Scholar

  7. Websites • Always be a little skeptical about them • You can usually find what you want in the About section of the homepage • URLs have predictable extensions: .com for businesses, .org for nonprofits, .edu for schools, .gov for governments. [.net = ??] • Government Information/Statistics

  8. Books • OSCAR • OhioLink

  9. Annotated Bibliography • Rough Draft due next Thursday • Each source should have a paragraph explaining how you found it [be specific] and how it will be used. • 6-8 sources • 1-2 books • 2-4 articles • 2 websites • Interviews: you can list 1-2 interviews that you are expecting to conduct.

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