How do you develop research skills?
ECON 002B: The Health of Nations
Simon Elichko (they/them)
Social Sciences & Data Librarian
What we'll work on:
- Why does developing research skills matter?
- Getting comfortable using some of the resources available to you at Swarthmore
- How to get the most out of research projects
Research skills?
Kosmyna, Nataliya, et al. "Your brain on ChatGPT: Accumulation of cognitive debt when using an AI assistant for essay writing task." arXiv preprint arXiv:2506.08872 4 (2025).
Expertise &
Disciplines
Swarthmore Works
faculty & student scholarship
Browzine
academic journals
you can access
Doing research vs.
directionless tab overload

Practices that can help you actively build knowledge as you work on a research project
- Create a synthesis matrix to track particular questions and claims across different articles
- Consider setting up Zotero, which lets you tag your sources, add notes to them, and format citations (also: free storage with Swarthmore.edu email)
- Brainstorm your research questions and take high-level notes visually using a mind map
Research mapping can help with background reading and your literature review
Active Reading: Synthesis Matrix
Article 1 |
Article 2 | Article 3 | |
---|---|---|---|
Question 1: |
|||
Question 2: |
|||
Theme 1: |
Information Timeline Graphic by adstarkel. Used under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

Resources available to you
at Swarthmore

Resources
Expertise
Services
Spaces
{Subscriptions to journals and newspapers, books and ebooks, databases, technology}
{Instruction, project consultation, assistance with requests, selecting materials, managing systems}
{Requesting articles, borrowing books from other libraries, putting materials on reserve for courses}
Some things the Libraries provide:
{Study spaces, meeting rooms; McCabe, Cornell, Underhill, Special Collections}
Some useful tools for doing
research in Economics:
-
Tripod - find books, journal articles, and other resources available through the TriCo libraries
-
EconLit - specialized database for finding and reading economics research on particular topics
-
Data Resources - resources for finding statistics and datasets, including PolicyMap, ICPSR, Statista, and others
- News Resources - Swarthmore subscriptions to Financial Times, Wall Street Journal, New York Times. (*These aren't research, but can be useful for background and current updates.)
Getting a book from the library
- Take the paper with your book title and call number
- Scan the QR code to open the tutorial on finding a book in McCabe
- Use the call number to find your book on the shelf
- Take your book and bring it back with you (McCabe 306)
Need the elevator? Turn right
Call number starts with | Floor in McCabe |
---|---|
A-E | Lower Floor |
F-K | 2nd Floor |
L-Z | 3rd Floor |

source: McMaster University Library
Library Book Basics
Example call number:
HQ1163 .H55 2022
H: Social Sciences
H: 2nd Floor
Call number starts with | Floor in McCabe |
---|---|
A-E | Lower Floor |
F-K | 2nd Floor |
L-Z | 3rd Floor |
Tutorial: How to find a book in McCabe
Scholarly Books
Tripod: Search TriCo Libraries tripod.swarthmore.edu
You can find scholarly books in Tripod and Worldcat,
but you'll also find plenty of non-scholarly books intended for a popular audience.
How can you tell which books are scholarly?
• published by a university press or academic publisher (e.g. Routledge, Springer/Palgrave) • cite other research • written by economists (or sociologists, political scientists, etc.) •
Relevance
- Is it on topic?
- What are you looking for?
- Background information
- Evidence / data
-
Arguments
- Other scholars' arguments that you can critique and build on
-
Methods
- Ideas for how to approach studying your specific question
Quality
- Is it scholarly?
- Does it cite other research?
-
Author expertise
- Author/contributor bios
- Try searching: first name last name cv
-
Publisher
- Article: was it published in an academic journal?
-
Book: published by a university press?
- Routledge, Springer
- How often is this article cited? An imperfect metric, but can be roughly helpful (look up article in Google Scholar)
How do you know if a source is any good?
TriCo
Login to Tripod to request delivery (arrives 1-2 days)
E-Z Borrow
Borrow from academic libraries in PA, NJ (arrives in ~1 week)
Borrow books, journals, microfilm, DVDs, etc. from all over the world. (arrives in 1-3 weeks)
Penn Drexel Temple NYU Rutgers
Swat Haverford Bryn Mawr
Oxford Columbia University of Amsterdam
Harvard Stanford Museum of Natural History
You can also access library materials from
TriCo and beyond
You can request PDFs of articles & book chapters not owned in the TriCo.
Where to find scholarly journal articles in Economics


You can get links to databases and other resources for this class on the Economics Research Guide
Find a link to Research Guides in Tripod
or on the Swarthmore Libaries site.
To connect to EconLit, click the yellow S.
Now, try searching EconLit for articles on the country you've chosen for the assignment you discussed earlier today.
Searching EconLit


Research help & advice
- Make an appointment with Simon
- Email: selichk1@swarthmore.edu
More ways to get help:
- Use Tripod Chat to get help with quick questions
(usually available M-Th, 1-4pm) - Contact subject librarians, or email librarian@swarthmore.edu and your question will reach the right person.
- Ask at the McCabe front desk
ECON FYS: The Health of Nations
By Swarthmore Reference
ECON FYS: The Health of Nations
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