or...
How to be information literate &
Be more efficient and productive with your time
In other words:
you will have heightened information literacy skills ! :-)
choose your topic
formulate a thesis question
know the type of sources needed
(popular information vs. scholarly studies, books vs. journal articles, etc.)
topic & research question :
=> The Pool &Kick-off presentation
knowing the type of sources needed :
(popular information vs. scholarly studies, books vs. journal articles, etc.)
=> Exercise 1
select appropriate research methods
create effective search strategies
use online catalogs, databases and related services
Organise the information found
topic & research question :
=> The Pool &Kick-off presentation
knowing the type of sources needed
(popular information vs. scholarly studies, books vs. journal articles, etc.)
=> Exercise 1
HOW TO START?
Define the keywords you can use
Start broad, progressively narrow down
Use search building techniques - synonyms, limiters, refining
Know how to read your results
Note ‘clues’ in your results -jargon, prolific authors, exclusion terms etc.
Repeat your search – be persistent, patient, think laterally
DEFINE LIMITATIONS
Time frame
Type of literature
Gender?
Age?
Population?
Technology?
Language?
consider a source's reliability, credibility and suitability for your particular use
synthesize the information gathered into new concepts
re-evaluate one's search strategy if necessary
topic & research question :
=> The Pool &Kick-off presentation
knowing the type of sources needed
(popular information vs. scholarly studies, books vs. journal articles, etc.)
=> Exercise 1
HOW TO ASSES WHAT TO USE?
Scan through titles
Are the keywords in the title of interest?
Read abstract or introduction
Saves time!
Useful? Read the whole article!
Mark interesting paragraphs
Is it credible?
Is it transferable?
Is it dependable?
Is it confirmable?
Different sources used?
Control study?
Multiple prototypes?
Can you generalise the study findings to other situations and contexts?
Dependability is concerned with whether we would obtain the same results if we could observe the same thing twice.
The degree to which the results could be confirmed or corroborated by others
Write your paper / report
Design your 360 scan
HOW TO PRESENT?
Many ways
Qualitative
Quantitative
Text / tables / graphes /
infographics / video / ...
Connect sources to each other
How to demonstrate?
Appropriately document sources through in-text citation
Include a bibliography of sources in an established style (@Saxion we use APA) at the end of your document
Adhere to fair use and copyright laws when applicable
APA References
Use a Reference manager
(MS Word / Mendeley Desktop / Zotero)
Reference in your text
Use a reference list in the end
Start right away!
Waiting until the end will take much more time!
In other words, plagiarism is an act of fraud. It involves both stealing someone else's work and lying about it afterward.
Source: http://www.plagiarism.org/plagiarism-101/what-is-plagiarism/
Most cases of plagiarism can be avoided, however, by citing sources.
Simply acknowledging that certain material has been borrowed and providing your audience with the information necessary to find that source is usually enough to prevent plagiarism.
Source: http://www.plagiarism.org/plagiarism-101/what-is-plagiarism/
Helpful links
http://www.plagiarism.org/citing-sources/overview/
https://www.saxionbibliotheek.nl/details/aip