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How Do I Find Information About My Topic?
After
you have selected a general area within a broad topic, you should begin
to superficially explore the available information. You will
do this for the following reasons:
-
To
determine whether there is enough applicable information to create a
research paper. If you are having difficulty locating sources for
the general area, you will have even more trouble locating sources
for a narrower topic. It might be wise to find a new broad topic,
or you could seek help from a librarian at the Reference Desk.
- To generate ideas
for a narrower topic. As you examine articles and books on the general
area, possibilities for a narrower research topic will present themselves.
- To gather general
information about your topic. A broad general knowledge of your topic
area will help you make better decisions and judgments when you begin
to write about your more specific topic.
In most cases, you
begin with only a smattering of information about your topic. The detailed
facts—important authors, nuances within the subject, crucial concepts
and ideas—are yet to be discovered. Several broad methods of fact-gathering
are outlined next:
- General knowledge
to particular knowledge
- Particular knowledge
to general knowledge
- Serendipity
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