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Utgivning, distribution etc. University of Chicago Press University Presses Marketing [distributor] , Chicago, Ill. ; Bristol : 2008
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SAB klassifikationskod
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Serietitel - biuppslagsform
Anmärkning: Allmän
Anmärkning: Bibliografi etc. Includes bibliographical references and index
Term
ISBN 978-0-226-06566-3 0-226-06566-9 (pbk.) 0-226-06566-9 978-0-226-06565-6 (hbk.) 978-0-226-06565-6 0-226-06565-0 (hbk.) 0-226-06565-0 978-0-226-06566-3 (pbk.)
Antal i kö:
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*008110824s2008 ilu| | | |00| 0 eng c
*020 $a978-0-226-06566-3
*020 $a0-226-06566-9 (pbk.)
*020 $a0-226-06566-9
*020 $a978-0-226-06565-6 (hbk.)
*020 $a978-0-226-06565-6
*020 $a0-226-06565-0 (hbk.)
*020 $a0-226-06565-0
*020 $a978-0-226-06566-3 (pbk.)
*035 $a(Ko)32782
*084 $aAef
*084 $aDd
*1001 $aBooth, Wayne C.
*24514$aThe craft of research /$cWayne C. Booth, Gregory G. Colomb, Joseph M. Williams
*250 $a3. ed.
*260 $aChicago, Ill. ;$aBristol :$bUniversity of Chicago Press$bUniversity Presses Marketing [distributor] ,$c2008
*300 $a317 s. :$bill. :$c22 cm.
*440 $aChicago guides to writing, editing, and publishing
*500 $aPrevious ed.: 2003
*504 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index
*650 4$aResearch
*650 4$aMethodology
*650 4$aTechnical writing
*650 4$aForskningsmetodik
*650 4$aRapportskrivning
*650 4$aVetenskapligt skrivande
*650 4$aResearch methodology
*650 4$aReport writing
*650 4$aReport writing
*650 4$aResearch - Methodology
*650 4$aAcademic writing
*7001 $aColomb, Gregory G.$4aut
*7001 $aWilliams, Joseph M.$4aut
*8520 $hDd
^
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With more than 400,000 copies now in print, The Craft of Research is the unrivaled resource for researchers at every level, from first-year undergraduates to research reporters at corporations and government offices. Seasoned researchers and educators Gregory G. Colomb and Joseph M. Williams present an updated third edition of their classic handbook, whose first and second editions were written in collaboration with the late Wayne C. Booth. The Craft of Research explains how to build an argument that motivates readers to accept a claim; how to anticipate the reservations of readers and to respond to them appropriately; and how to create introductions and conclusions that answer that most demanding question, "So what?" The third edition includes an expanded discussion of the essential early stages of a research task: planning and drafting a paper. The authors have revised and fully updated their section on electronic research, emphasizing the need to distinguish between trustworthy sources (such as those found in libraries) and less reliable sources found with a quick Web search. A chapter on warrants has also been thoroughly reviewed to make this difficult subject easier for researchers Throughout, the authors have preserved the amiable tone, the reliable voice, and the sense of directness that have made this book indispensable for anyone undertaking a research project.
Preface: The Aims of This Edition p. xi Our Debts p. xv Research, Researchers, and Readers p. 1 Prologue: Becoming a Researcher p. 3 Thinking in Print: The Uses of Research, Public and Private p. 9 What Is Research? p. 10 Why Write It Up? p. 11 Why a Formal Report? p. 13 Writing Is Thinking p. 14 Connecting with Your Reader: (Re-)Creating Yourself and Your Readers p. 16 Creating Roles for Yourself and Your Readers p. 16 Understanding Your Role p. 18 Imagining Your Reader's Role p. 20 Quick Tip: A Checklist for Understanding Your Readers p. 26 Asking Questions, Finding Answers p. 29 Prologue: Planning Your Project-An Overview p. 31 Quick Tip: Creating a Writing Group p. 34 From Topics to Questions p. 35 From an Interest to a Topic p. 36 From a Broad Topic to a Focused One p. 39 From a Focused Topic to Questions p. 40 From a Question to Its Significance p. 45 Quick Tip: Finding Topics p. 49 From Questions to a Problem p. 51 Distinguishing Practical and Research Problems p. 52 Understanding the Common Structure of Problems p. 54 Finding a Good Research Problem p. 62 Learning to Work with Problems p. 64 Quick Tip: Manage the Unavoidable Problem of Inexperience p. 66 From Problems to Sources p. 68 Knowing How to Use Three Kinds of Sources p. 68 Locating Sources through a Library p. 70 Locating Sources on the Internet p. 75 Evaluating Sources for Relevance and Reliability p. 76 Following Bibliographical Trails p. 80 Looking beyond Predictable Sources p. 81 Using People as Primary Sources p. 81 Quick Tip: The Ethics of Using People as Sources of Data p. 83 Engaging Sources p. 84 Knowing What Kind of Evidence to Look For p. 85 Record Complete Bibliographical Data p. 85 Engaging Sources Actively p. 87 Using Secondary Sources to Find a Problem p. 88 Using Secondary Sources to Plan Your Argument p. 92 Recording What You Find p. 95 Quick Tip: Manage Moments of Normal Anxiety p. 101 Making a Claim and Supporting IT p. 103 Prologue: Assembling a Research Argument p. 105 Making Good Arguments: An Overview p. 108 Argument as a Conversation with Readers p. 108 Supporting Your Claim p. 110 Acknowledging and Responding to Anticipated Questions and Objections p. 112 Warranting the Relevance of Your Reasons p. 114 Building a Complex Argument Out of Simple Ones p. 116 Creating an Ethos by Thickening Your Argument p. 117 Quick Tip: A Common Mistake-Falling Back on What You Know p. 119 Making Claims p. 120 Determining the Kind of Claim You Should Make p. 120 Evaluating Your Claim p. 122 Quick Tip: Qualifying Claims to Enhance Your Credibility p. 127 Assembling Reasons and Evidence p. 130 Using Reasons to Plan Your Argument p. 130 Distinguishing Evidence from Reasons p. 131 Distinguishing Evidence from Reports of It p. 133 Evaluating Your Evidence p. 135 Acknowledgments and Responses p. 139 Questioning Your Argument as Your Readers Will p. 140 Imagining Alternatives to Your Argument p. 142 Deciding What to Acknowledge p. 143 Framing Your Responses as Subordinate Arguments p. 145 The Vocabulary of Acknowledgment and Response p. 146 Quick Tip: Three Predictable Disagreements p. 150 Warrants p. 152 Warrants in Everyday Reasoning p. 153 Warrants in Academic Arguments p. 154 Understanding the Logic of Warrants p. 155 Testing Whether a Warrant Is Reliable p. 156 Knowing When to State a Warrant p. 162 Challenging Others' Warrants p. 164 Quick Tip: Two Kinds of Arguments p. 169 Planning, Drafting, and Revising p. 171 Prologue: Planning Again p. 173 Quick Tip: Outlining and Storyboarding p. 175 Planning p. 177 Avoid Three Common but Flawed Plans p. 177 Planning Your Report p. 179 Drafting Your Report p. 187 Draft in a Way That Feels Comfortable p. 187 Use Key Words to Keep Yourself on Track p. 188 Quote, Paraphrase, and Summarize Appropriately p. 188 Integrating Direct Quotations into Your Text p. 189 Show Readers How Evidence Is Relevant p. 190 Guard against Inadvertent Plagiarism p. 191 The Social Importance of Citing Sources p. 195 Four Common Citation Styles p. 197 Work through Procrastination and Writer's Block p. 199 Quick Tip: Indicating Citations in Your Text p. 200 Revising Your Organization and Argument p. 203 Thinking Like a Reader p. 204 Revising the Frame of Your Report p. 204 Revising Your Argument p. 206 Revising the Organization of Your Report p. 207 Check Your Paragraphs p. 209 Let Your Draft Cool, Then Paraphrase It p. 209 Quick Tip: Abstracts p. 211 Communicating Evidence Visually p. 213 Choosing Visual or Verbal Representations p. 213 Choosing the Most Effective Graphic p. 214 Designing Tables, Charts, and Graphs p. 216 Specific Guidelines for Tables, Bar Charts, and Line Graphs p. 220 Communicating Data Ethically p. 226 Introductions and Conclusions p. 232 The Common Structure of Introductions p. 232 Step 1: Establish Common Ground p. 235 Step 2: State Your Problem p. 237 Step 3: State Your Response p. 241 Setting the Right Pace for Your Introduction p. 242 Writing Your Conclusion p. 244 Finding Your First Few Words p. 245 Finding Your Last Few Words p. 247 Quick Tip: Titles p. 248 Revising Style: Telling Your Story Clearly p. 249 Judging Style p. 249 The First Two Principles of Clear Writing p. 251 A Third Principle: Old before New p. 260 Choosing between Active and Passive p. 262 A Final Principle: Complexity Last p. 264 Spit and Polish p. 267 Quick Tip: The Quickest Revision Strategy p. 268 Some Last Considerations p. 271 The Ethics of Research p. 273 A Postscript for Teachers p. 277 Bibliographical Resources p. 283 Index p. 313