The Research Process
Databasics
Academic integrity
Sources
Miscellaneous
100

This is the first, but the hardest part of the research process.

What is developing a research question? 

100

Name the research tool in our library where you can find books, articles, videos, theses, and more

What is OMNI?

100

You must do this whenever you quote or paraphrase someone else's work.

What is cite your source?

100

Which of these is NOT a credible academic source: blog, peer-reviewed article, or book chapter? 

What is blog?

100

Type of source, which gives a first-hand account of an event

What is the primary source?

200

Brainstorming these before you begin searching can help expand and improve your results.

What are keywords AND/OR synonyms?

200

These three Boolean Operators help narrow or expand your search. 

What are AND, OR & NOT?

200

The use of words, ideas, images without giving credit to your source.

What is plagiarism?

200

Which type of source is peer-reviewed: newspaper, blog, or scholarly journal?


What is a scholarly journal?

200

Journals that are reviewed by experts in the field prior to publication.

What are peer-reviewed journals?

300

Narrow this topic: "Climate change"

"Example: How does climate change affect the mental health of teens with preexisting anxiety? 

300

Searching exact phrases is easy when you use these.

What are quotation marks?

300

Three strategies to avoid plagiarism in your academic writing

What is quoting, paraphrasing, summarizing?

300

This source type has many sections, such as abstract, methodology, results, discussion, conclusion, and references

What is a scholarly article? 

300

The section of a scholarly article that explains how a study was conducted.

What is methodology/research methods? 

400

Why is research not a linear process?


You often revise the question, adjust keywords, and refine your focus as you learn more.

400

When would you use OR instead of AND in your search?


When you want to broaden your search using synonyms or related terms.

400

A brief reference to your sources within the body of your paper

What is in-text citation?

400

Why is the author of a source important for evaluating information type?



Author credentials reveal expertise, bias, authority, and perspective.

400

A framework to evaluate information sources

What is ACT UP? 

500

A strong literature review includes this, a fancy word for bringing together ideas from different sources.

What is synthesis?

500

Turn this into a search string: How does social media affect mental health?


 What is “social media” AND “mental health”? 

500

This technique involves using the bibliography or references list of one source to track down additional sources.

What is backwards citation searching?

500

Why can a newspaper article be considered “primary” in one context and “secondary” in another?


Because classification depends on how it’s used. A source’s role changes based on the research question.

500

When evaluating sources, we estimate how recently the information was published.

What is currency?

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