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BUS 360: BUSINESS COMMUNICATION. Shane Plante Business Librarian, SFU Surrey spa61@sfu.ca. The research process:. Choose a research question Think of some sub-questions Identify likely publishers Search and cycle your search Evaluate your results Write your report.
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BUS 360: BUSINESS COMMUNICATION Shane Plante Business Librarian, SFU Surrey spa61@sfu.ca
The research process: • Choose a research question • Think of some sub-questions • Identify likely publishers • Search and cycle your search • Evaluate your results • Write your report
The research process: • Choose a research question (done for you!) • Think of some sub-questions • Identify likely publishers • Search and cycle your search • Evaluate your results • Write your report
The research process: • Choose a research question • Think of some sub-questions (partly done for you questions to think about for your report) • Identify likely publishers • Search and cycle your search • Evaluate your results • Write your report
The research process: • Choose a research question • Think of some sub-questions • Identify likely publishers • Search and cycle your search • Evaluate your results • Write your report
The research process: • Choose a research question • Think of some sub-questions • Identify likely publishers • Search and cycle your search • Evaluate your results • Write your report
The research process: • Choose a research question • Think of some sub-questions • Identify likely publishers • Search and cycle your search • Evaluate your results • Write your report
Scholarly vs. popular publications REVIEW: • Which is scholarly? • How do you know?
Reliability • Bibliography + methodology = documentation • Author info = authority • Length/language = completeness + purpose
Reliability • When you cite a scholarly article, you seldom need to evaluate the article’s reliability. • The peer review process does most of the work for you. • Bonus question: What does “peer-reviewed” mean?
Information quality For your report, you may have difficulty finding useful scholarly articles, so you will have to evaluateevery fact and opinion that you find.
Information quality: The “3 Rs” • Reliability • Is the source credible? • Recency • How current is the information? • Relevance • Does it apply to your topic?
Relevance Transferability: • How well does the information you've found transfer to your case? • Geography • Example: Is the study you’ve found from Japan still relevant to your topic? • Industry • Example: Is the industry you have found information for relevant to the one you are focusing on?
Relevance Scalability: • How well does the scale of the information you've found apply to your case? • Example: Is information about Starbucks relevant to a small coffee shop in Surrey?
Information quality • Remember: Decisions will be made based on the report and recommendations that you deliver. • You might not find many facts/opinions that meet the 3Rs perfectly. • Try to anticipate (and answer) the questions that your audience will have about the information you’ve included. • If you notice something, assume that they will notice it. • If it’s relevant, briefly explain your rationale for including it.
Evaluating an article excerpt • Evaluate the reliability (including the authority, documentation, completeness, and purpose) of the article excerpt on your handout, “Checking 101; How you introduce bodychecking to minor hockey players … ”
The research process: • Choose a research question • Think of some sub-questions • Identify likely publishers • Search and cycle your search • Evaluate your results • Write your report
APA guides and plagiarism tutorial APA guides Plagiarism tutorial
Writing and avoiding plagiarism • If you don’t know how to correctly cite a document, feel free to ask a librarian for help. • If you want help with writing/structuring your paper or quoting/paraphrasing documents, see the Student Learning Commons. • Workshops • One-to-one appointments • Drop-in consultations
Is this plagiarism? Direct quotation: “When a significant violation of public trust has occurred, lying is a common corollary because the wrongdoing invites concealment” (Fleming & Zyglidopoulos, 2008, p. 838). Student A’s paper: If a serious violation of public trust occurs, lying is often the result because this action invites concealment (Fleming & Zyglidopoulos, 2008).
Is this plagiarism? Direct quotation: “When a significant violation of public trust has occurred, lying is a common corollary because the wrongdoing invites concealment” (Fleming & Zyglidopoulos, 2008, p. 838). Student A’s paper: If a serious violation of public trust occurs, lying is often the result because this action invites concealment (Fleming & Zyglidopoulos, 2008).
Is this plagiarism? Direct quotation: “When a significant violation of public trust has occurred, lying is a common corollary because the wrongdoing invites concealment” (Fleming & Zyglidopoulos, 2008, p. 838). Student B’s paper: Organizations often feel compelled to lie about their actions when they are discovered to have taken advantage of the public (Fleming & Zyglidopoulos, 2008).
Avoiding plagiarism • If you include any ideas or sentences in your paper that come from elsewhere (e.g., articles, books, websites), you need to acknowledge those sources. • Citing a document incorrectly is always better than not citing it. • Leave yourself time to cite your sources.
Getting Help • Ask anyone at the reference desk in any of the three campus libraries • Use our Ask a Librarianservices (via the Library home page) to contact a librarian (by phone, IM, or email). • Contact : Shane Plante spa61@sfu.ca Class? Due Date? Where have you searched? How have you searched? Found anything close to what you need? (I’ll typically be on campus Tuesdays to Fridays.)