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COMM 430: Communication Research and Inquiry

Getting started with research

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COD Newsroom. (2018, May 2). See writing differently 2018 24. Retrieved from https://www.flickr.com/photos/codnewsroom/27024213257Used under the Creative Commons License.

You (and potentially several other group members) have been assigned a research project.  Where do you begin?  How do you begin?  How does one make conducting research as easy, and perhaps more importantly as unintimidating as possible?  How does one proceed methodically, and avoid a scattershot approach to researching?

If you've wrestled with these questions or others like them, you're not alone.  Unlike typing words into Google and finding information of varying quality, conducting research is not a process that is immediately intuitive -- most students have to learn how to understand, get used to, and then conduct university-level research.  The good news is that there is a methodological approach to conducting research at this level, and that this approach can be learned and then replicated across every course you take.  Furthermore, learning how to research helps you understand how to judge the quality of the information you find, and helps get you more authoritative resources than Google or other free Web search engines typically offer.

The tabs to the left help you understand the research process, and understand how the timeline of when information is published affects its value in informing your own research.  They offer assistance in developing a research topic (and honing it into a research question if that is what your coursework asks you to do), identifying search terms based upon that topic, and then direction in selecting search tools to use in conducting your research.

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