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The Essential Guide to Using the Web for Research
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The Essential Guide to Using the Web for Research



256 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
In recent years, the internet has provided students and researchers with fantastic opportunities and a distinct set of challenges. In his new book, Nigel Ford shows how these opportunities and challenges impact on student research projects and explains the skills needed to navigate the web and use it effectively, emphasizing independent learning and the ability to critically assess information and transform it into effective evidence.

In connecting these online skills to the research process, Ford helps students to understand and answer research questions, construct an argument and present their evidence.

The book includes sections on:

• beginner and advanced search techniques

• assessing online information

• organising and storing information

• social networking sites and other online tools

• referencing, copyright and plagiarism.

As well as providing all of the basic techniques students need to use the internet as a research tool, this book will also help them to convert their online findings into a well structured, high quality research project.

 
Introduction
 
Why Read This Book?
 
The Book's Underlying Rationale
 
Search Tools Covered in this Book
 
Learning and Critical Thinking: The Essentials
 
Learning and Assessment Basics
 
Essential Learning Components
 
Summary
 
Clarifying What Is Required of You
 
Clarifying the Nature of your Assignment
 
Planning your Assignment
 
Summary
 
Finding High-Quality Information
 
Defining 'Authoritative' Information
 
Information Seeking
 
Summary
 
How to Do a Literature Review
 
Initial Explorations
 
Strategies for Finding High-Quality Academic Sources
 
Summary
 
Information Sources and Search Tools
 
Types of information source
 
Types of search tool
 
Summary
 
Mapping Search Approaches and Techniques to Information Needs
 
Directory-Based Browsing and Searching
 
Topic Similarity Searching
 
Document Similarity Searching
 
Filtering
 
Citation Searching
 
Boolean and Other Advanced Search Engine Operators
 
Summary
 
Scholarly Search Tools in Detail
 
When to Use Which Search Tools
 
Google Scholar
 
SciVerse Scopus
 
Web of Knowledge Incorporating Web of Science
 
Summary
 
Transforming Information into Evidence-Based Arguments
 
Making Information 'Your Own'
 
Critically Evaluating Information
 
Validity, Reliability, Objectivity and Generalisability as Critical Tools
 
Developing Your Own Evidence-Based Arguments
 
Summary
 
Presenting Your Evidence Effectively
 
Plagiarism
 
Citing Your Sources
 
Summary
 
Keeping up to Date
 
A New Document is Published on your Topic
 
Documents in Which You Are Interested Are Cited in a Newly Published Document
 
An Author is Cited by a New Document or Publishes a New Document
 
A New Issue of a Journal in which you are Interested is Published
 
A website in Which You Are Interested is Updated
 
Summary
 
Organizing and Sharing Your Information
 
Mendeley Basics
 
Importing Data from Google Scholar and Other Search Tools
 
Adding PDF Files to Your Library
 
Inserting References into Your Work
 
Summary

Well structured, thorough, accessibly written and presented, Nigel Ford uses lots of charts, diagrams and step-by-step guides to steer the reader... It is primarily targeted at undergraduate and postgraduate students who will definitely find it invaluable when setting out on their dissertations and theses...That said, this guide will prove equally useful for professional researchers in any field...Overall I consider this a very useful and timely book. Indeed I wish I'd seen it many years ago. Its key strengths are its pertinence to researchers' current needs, thoroughness, detailed discussions, accessibility, step by step approach and supply of handy techniques and tips.
Berni Graham
SRA News


 

Ford offers the answers to the question of how to find interesting web material for your research and it is clear that here is where Ford’s expertise comes through. Personally, I use mainly Google, Picarta and some catalogues of universities and research institutions. Ford offers a number of additions to my repertoire. In addition to Google, he includes SciVerse Scopus and Web of Knowledge and advises that a systematic search strategy should constantly be evaluated and, if necessary, adjusted.

Raynald Bosch
KWALON Journal

An excellent text which gives researchers the theory of research design and the knowledge and insight to be able to practice and master the skills. This is an essential read for any researcher looking to use the internet for primary, secondary or tertiary study.

Mr Paul Matthews
School of Hospitality, Tourism & Events, University College Birmingham
February 23, 2016

I would recommend this book to my Master as well as to my PhD students as an essential guide for systematic research using the Web.

Professor Alfred Zimmermann
Faculty of Informatics, Reutlingen University of Applied Sci
May 26, 2015

Great text to accompany composition courses. It asks good questions about our uses and understandings of the internet in relation to writing.

Dr AmberNicole Pfannenstiel
English Dept, Northern Arizona University
April 6, 2015

This book provides a detailed and thorough guide for structuring diploma projects at any level. It would also be helpful for semester research projects in cases where the students are proficient users of English.

Ms Shala Barczewska
Institute of Foreign Languages, Uniwersytet Jana Kochanowskiego w Kielcach
September 25, 2014

Excellent addition for supplementary reading.

Mr Martyn Jarvis
Faculty of Business and Society, Department of Law, Accounting and Finance, Univ. of South Wales
June 27, 2014

This book could be useful to prepare the syllabus but not as an essential reading for the students. We are not improving practical skills but a critical knowledge about limits and opportunity offered by the web for research.

Dr Valentina Bazzarin
Social and Political Sciences, University of Bologna
June 3, 2014

A very good text that helps students develop digital literacy skills empowering them to critically select appropriate material via the internet. Highly recommended

Mr Stuart Agnew
Social Science , University Campus Suffolk Ltd
July 14, 2013

Easy to read and very comprehensive.

Ms Victoria Heywood
Scarborough School of Education, Hull University
December 11, 2012

Sample Materials & Chapters

Chapter Two


Nigel Ford

For instructors

SAGE Research Methods is a research methods tool created to help researchers, faculty and students with their research projects. SAGE Research Methods links over 175,000 pages of SAGE’s renowned book, journal and reference content with truly advanced search and discovery tools. Researchers can explore methods concepts to help them design research projects, understand particular methods or identify a new method, conduct their research, and write up their findings. Since SAGE Research Methods focuses on methodology rather than disciplines, it can be used across the social sciences, health sciences, and more.