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 | The Research Process: A Complete Guide and Reference for Writers, 2nd Edition
|
 |  | Martin Maner, WRIGHT STATE UNIV-DAYTON
| | Spiral Bound/Comb | | ©2000, ISBN-13 9780767411394 | | | Publisher's Retail Price:$50.31
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| | Bookstore's Wholesale Price:$40.25
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|  | | Description | The Research Process explains, models, and analyzes the recursive process of conducting research and writing research papers. The text - along with the dedicated website and free student CD-ROM - provides exceptional guidance on writing substantive research papers using print and electronic sources and emphasizes the enjoyment and rewards that research writing offers.
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| Table of Contents |
Preface
Introduction: Research—Who Needs It?
1. THE NATURE OF RESEARCH WRITING
The Purpose of Research Writing / Research as New Knowledge / Defining the Necessary Degree of Doubt / Describing, Narrating, Explaining, and Arguing / Prewriting / Using a Research Journal to Develop the Argument / Avoiding Mistakes in Choosing a Topic
2. FINDING AND NARROWING THE TOPIC
Start with Ideas and Questions in Your Journal / Overview of the Research Writing Process / State Your Hypothesis Before Source Hunting / Finding Evidence to Support Your Hypothesis / Must an Objective Library Paper Have an Argument? / Topics and Stages of Writing / The Learning Spiral / Subject Areas and Narrow Topics / Using Indexes and Subject Headings to Formulate a Topic / A Twenty-Question Method of Topic Formulation / A Five-Question Method of Topic Formulation / How to Make an Assigned Topic Interesting
3. GENERATING AN ARGUMENT
Avoiding Passive Information Gathering / Using Exposition Effectively / Arguing with Yourself / Making the Argument Develop / Can I Really Challenge Experts? / The Three Bases of Persuasion / Toulmin’s Approach to Argument
4. FINDING SOURCES
How Many Sources Am I Looking For? / Magic Solutions / Starting a Bibliographical Card File / Preliminaries / Step One: Using Encyclopedias / Step Two: Using Library Catalogs / Step Three: Using Indexes / Step Four: Searching the Internet / After Step Four: What Next? / Items to Record When Copying Citations / Interpreting Title Pages, Copyright Pages, and Computer Screens
5. WRITING A SHORT PLAN
A Prospectus and Its Advantages / Formats for a Prospectus / An Abstract / Using a Short Plan to Guide Your Research
6. GATHERING INFORMATION
Active Reading / Evaluating Sources / Note-Taking Methods / Three Types of File: Journal, Notes, Bibliography / Using Topic Headings to Organize Your Notes / Avoiding Plagiarism: Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing / Sample Journal Entries, Notes, and Bibliography Cards / Notes on Disks / Using Photocopies Responsibly to Avoid Plagiarism / Using Interviews
7. RESEARCH PAPER FORMATS: MLA AND APA
Overview of Research Paper Formats / All Formats: The Function of Documentation / Plagiarism and Common Knowledge / MLA Format: General Appearance / MLA Format: Parenthetical Documentation / MLA Format: The List of Works Cited / APA Format: General Appearance / APA Format: Parenthetical Documentation / APA Format: The List of Works Cited
8. RESEARCH PAPER FORMATS: CBE AND CHICAGO
CBE Citation Sequence Format: General Appearance / CBE Citation Sequence Format: Documentation / CBE Citation Sequence Format: The List of Cited References / Chicago Format: General Appearance / Chicago Format: Documentation / Chicago Format: The List of Works Cited
9. WRITING THE ROUGH DRAFT
Outlines / Starting the Rough Draft / Assembling the Rough Draft from Notes / Assembling the Rough Draft on a Word Processor / Style and Usage: “To Whom Am I Speaking” or “Who Am I Speaking To?” / Developing Good Working Habits / Strategies for Introductions and Conclusions / Avoiding the Bad Habits of Academic Writers: An Editor’s Advice
10. REVISING THE ROUGH DRAFT
Guidelines for Revision / Using the Topic Outline as a Guide to Revision / Generating a Sentence Outline While Revising the Rough Draft / Examples of Outlines Used in Revision / Revising to Improve the Argumentative Focus / The Hook Paragraph Transition / Other Types of Transition / Adjusting the Length of Paragraphs / A Sample Revision / Revising as Self-Criticism
11. EDITING
Collaboration in Editing / Criteria for Editing / Edit for Coherence / Three Common Mistakes That Destroy Coherence / Edit for Conciseness / Punctuate for Clarity / Proofread for Mechanical Errors / Use Global Searches to Edit Details
12. SPECIAL PROBLEMS IN RESEARCH WRITING
Trying to Do Too Much / Special Problems in Finding Sources / Copyright Law and the Ethics of Research
13. MECHANICS
All Formats: General Appearance / MLA Format Mechanics / APA Format Mechanics: Differences from MLA Format / CBE Format Mechanics: Differences from MLA Format
In each chapter:
Quick View
Exercises
Glossary
Credits
Index
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 | New Features | Free CD-ROM Included: Every new copy of The Research Process includes sample student papers; documentation templates for MLA, APA, CSE, and Chicago styles; all the text exercises; a Guide to Oral Presentations; peer review guidlines; and an Internet tutorial. Website:The text's dedicated website offers tutorials on source evaluation, using search engines, and gathering information online. Presents the best research papers as well-crafted arguments (rather than mere reports) and supports different styles of learning and researching, offering tips and pointing out pitfalls Offers thorough coverage of four documentation formats: MLA, APA, CBE, and CMS, including sample student papers in each style Includes exercises dedicated to advancing students’ progress on their own research papers
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