Organizing Your Research
· The goal of creating a system to organize papers and references is to be able to easily access them later. If you follow the steps above, it’s relatively easy to keep track of and use what you’ve read – if you want to find a paper, you can search for a key word in your reference manager and/or in your running document of article summaries and then find a copy of the · Explain the importance of your research in the introduction. Explain your results in a logical sequence and support them with figures and tables. Discuss any data gaps and limitations. Allocate your time for the most important sections. Get feedback from colleagues · 2. Planning a Literature Review 3. Searching the Literature 4. Organizing Your Research 5. Writing a Literature Review Additional Resources Get Help Documenting Research Synthesis Matrix You can download and use this synthesis matrix to help organize your research. Summary Record
Organize Your Thoughts
· The goal of creating a system to organize papers and references is to be able to easily access them later. If you follow the steps above, it’s relatively easy to keep track of and use what you’ve read – if you want to find a paper, you can search for a key word in your reference manager and/or in your running document of article summaries and then find a copy of the • Organize by Evidence: evidence that supports your claim versus evidence that complicates it; in this scenario, you could start with the most persuasive or the least and build an argument. • Organize by Points: This means, you’ve spent time and have come up with three categories · 2. Planning a Literature Review 3. Searching the Literature 4. Organizing Your Research 5. Writing a Literature Review Additional Resources Get Help Documenting Research Synthesis Matrix You can download and use this synthesis matrix to help organize your research. Summary Record
Documenting Research
How research organizational methods differ between book and digital projects Verbal note-taking strategies for organizing your research Links to People, Places, and Publications Billy Smith Billy’s Montana State University webpage Ship of Death: A Voyage That Changed the Atlantic World Mapping Historic Philadelphia digital project · 2. Planning a Literature Review 3. Searching the Literature 4. Organizing Your Research 5. Writing a Literature Review Additional Resources Get Help Documenting Research Synthesis Matrix You can download and use this synthesis matrix to help organize your research. Summary Record · Explain the importance of your research in the introduction. Explain your results in a logical sequence and support them with figures and tables. Discuss any data gaps and limitations. Allocate your time for the most important sections. Get feedback from colleagues
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· Explain the importance of your research in the introduction. Explain your results in a logical sequence and support them with figures and tables. Discuss any data gaps and limitations. Allocate your time for the most important sections. Get feedback from colleagues • Organize by Evidence: evidence that supports your claim versus evidence that complicates it; in this scenario, you could start with the most persuasive or the least and build an argument. • Organize by Points: This means, you’ve spent time and have come up with three categories · The goal of creating a system to organize papers and references is to be able to easily access them later. If you follow the steps above, it’s relatively easy to keep track of and use what you’ve read – if you want to find a paper, you can search for a key word in your reference manager and/or in your running document of article summaries and then find a copy of the
Aim for Clarity
· 2. Planning a Literature Review 3. Searching the Literature 4. Organizing Your Research 5. Writing a Literature Review Additional Resources Get Help Documenting Research Synthesis Matrix You can download and use this synthesis matrix to help organize your research. Summary Record · The goal of creating a system to organize papers and references is to be able to easily access them later. If you follow the steps above, it’s relatively easy to keep track of and use what you’ve read – if you want to find a paper, you can search for a key word in your reference manager and/or in your running document of article summaries and then find a copy of the · Explain the importance of your research in the introduction. Explain your results in a logical sequence and support them with figures and tables. Discuss any data gaps and limitations. Allocate your time for the most important sections. Get feedback from colleagues
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