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Intro to Psych - Research Project

Getting Started

1) Topic Shop in the Science database

Browse issues you know are related to psychology.

Browse newspaper and magazine articles within those issues.  One of these popular periodical articles may spark an idea or interest in a certain topic.


2) Topic Shop in the New York Times and other newspapers.


3) Topic Shop in Wikipedia & Google.

    Use Wikipedia!
  • Do basic Google searches on anything that has interested you in sociology class.
    • Find news articles, organization websites, government websites, and wikipedia to help find a topic and formulate a question.
  • After conducting background research, determine what aspect of your topic to investigate.
    • Consider the mystery, debate, or controversies.
    • What interests you?
  • Use question starters to help create a question: 
    • Who
    • What
    • Why
    • When 
    • Where
    • How
    • To what extent
  • Put your question through some tests:
    • Answerable but not obvious?

    • Open? (not yes or no answer)

    • Simple?  (not multiple questions in one)

    • Debatable? (multiple perspectives)

    • Judgement or evaluation needed?

    • Narrow and focused enough?

  • You will eventually develop sub-questions that support your primary question.
    • EXAMPLE: 
      • Main question:  Was Harry Truman justified in dropping the atomic bomb?
      • Sub question: How extensive was the damage and loss of life in Hiroshima and Nagasaki?
      • ****The sub question still answers the primary question.****
  1. State your research question/topic

    • EXAMPLE: "How do cigarette companies target children with their advertising?"

  2. Identify main concepts:

    • EXAMPLE:  "How do cigarette companies target children with their advertising?"

  3. Brainstorm synonyms, related terms, broader terms, scientific/technical terms, and more specific terms based on your own background knowledge:

    • EXAMPLE:

      • Cigarette companies:  Philip Morris, Camel, Imperial

      • Children:  child, adolescent, teen, teenager, students, youth

      • Advertising:  ads, marketing, commercials, promotions, product placement

  4. Avoid the following:

    • Abbreviations - spell them out

    • Relationship words - words like compare, contrast, causation, etc.

    • Judgement words - words like best, worst, pro, con, etc.

  5. If needed, search Wikipedia and other reference sources to further develop your list of keywords.

 

Select Resources/Source Types Most Appropriate for the Information Need.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For Example:

Information Need Source Types
Current information on political issues Current Newspapers & Magazines
Background info in order to develop a question for a research project Reference, Wikipedia, Topic Overview Videos (Crash Course)
Current research on solar and wind power Academic Journals/Original Research & Government Websites/Docs
Information to help make an argument about the impact of U.S. westward expansion on indigenous people Primary Sources from the time, Academic Journal Articles by historians, & Books on the topic