COMM 1101 Exam 1: Chapter 6 (Topic Development)
Credentials
Credentials: experience or education that qualifies you to speak with authority on a specific subject
Primary research: Experiments
Designed study to test a hypothesis, must use scientific method Or you can use informal experiments
Conducting the interview: tips
Dress professionally, be on time, be courteous, ask permission to record, listen carefully, keep interview moving, end on time, get permission for quotes, confirm credentials THANK THEM!
Expert opinions and elaborations
Expert opinions: interpretations and judgements made by authorities in a particular subject area Elaborations: factual and expert opinion (anecdotes and narratives, comparisons/contrasts, quotations)
3 types of information sources: Primary research
Primary research: collecting your own data directly from real world Fieldwork Surveys Interviews Experiments
Factual statements: statistics
Statistics: only use reliable statistics, use sparingly, remember that stats are biased
Interviews
Structured conversations where one person asks questions and another answers them Use associated protocol and ethical considerations Select best person
Recording information: annotated bibliography
Complete citations, 2-3 sentence summaries, explaining support, direct quotes
What are the 3 types of information sources?
Evidence Primary research Secondary research
3 types of information sources: Evidence
Evidence: any information that clarifies, explains, or otherwise adds depth to a topic i.e. fieldwork observations, surveys, interviews
Primary research: original artifact or document
Examining original unpublished source like a diary Viewing an object to get info you need such as a building or monument
Factual statements: examples
Examples: specific instances that illustrate or explain a factual statement i.e. hypothetical, generalization, supporting example
What are factual statements? 3 types of factual statements
Factual statements: those that can be verified 1. statistics 2. examples 3. definitions
Ethnography
Fieldwork observations Participant observer: engaging Nonparticipant: non engaging Focus on specific behaviors taking notes on observations
Surveys What are some ways surveys are conducted?
Getting information about peoples ideas and opinions In person, phone, internet, paper pencil
How to process the interview
Make research cards of info you want to use in the speech Transcribe any recordings
Types of interviewing questions: Rapport-building, primary, secondary, open, closed, neutral
Rapport building: nonthreatening questions designed to put interviewee at ease and show your respect for them Primary question: introductory question about each major interview topic Secondary question: probe answers given to primary q's Open: broad based, ask interviewee to provide perspective, evidence, info, opinion Closed: narrowly focused questions, require only brief answer Neutral: questions phrased that do not direct a persons answers
3 types of information sources: Secondary research
Secondary research: locating information discovered by other people Internet sources (search engines, library databases) Encyclopedias, books, articles, news media, gov documents
Secondary research: skimming and abstract
Skimming: a method of rapidly going through work to determine what is covered and how Abstract: short paragraph summarizing research finds in an article
Citing sources What is an oral footnote?
Sources must need to be acknowledged Adds to credibility Oral footnotes: references to an original source Include enough info for listeners to access sources themselves!
Secondary research: evaluating sources
Valid sources: FACTUAL Accurate sources: UNBIASED Reliable sources: HISTORICALLY VALID AND ACCURATE (Authority, objectivity, currency, relevance)
Diverse cultural perspectives
When using factual statements, expert opinions, elaborations, etc its important to have a VARIETY of cultural perspectives
Research cards
one piece of information, key word, bibliographic data