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7: Search Strategies

  • Page ID
    90188
    • Walter D. Butler; Aloha Sargent; and Kelsey Smith
    • Pasadena City College, Cabrillo College, and West Hills Community College

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    • 7.1: Research Questions
      This page highlights the need to assess your knowledge and gaps regarding a research topic to create effective research questions. It suggests that after initial reading, you list what you know and what you need to learn, aiding in formulating focused questions. The distinction between regular and research questions is discussed, emphasizing the necessity for deeper exploration.
    • 7.2: Identifying the Main Concepts
      This page highlights the significance of identifying main concepts or keywords in research questions to improve the information search process. It explains that irrelevant words can obstruct searches and emphasizes that key terms are usually central nouns. Using divorce's impact on GPA as an example, it demonstrates how to identify these concepts. The page also notes that searching is iterative, advising researchers to refine keywords for better relevance and quality in search results.
    • 7.3: Avoiding Confirmation Bias
      This page explains confirmation bias, the tendency to favor information that supports one’s existing beliefs while ignoring contradictory evidence. It illustrates how this bias affects information searching, using the example of biased queries like "is rent control unfair to landlords." To combat confirmation bias, it recommends using broader and neutral search terms. Recognizing and addressing this bias is essential for effective information gathering and analysis.
    • 7.4: Brainstorming Related Terms
      This page highlights the significance of accurately describing main concepts, noting that various terms can denote the same subject, like GMOs. It emphasizes evaluating keyword selection to optimize search results, encouraging brainstorming of alternatives and consulting reference sources. This practice improves search effectiveness for accessing scholarly articles compared to popular media, with examples illustrating the concept.
    • 7.5: Creating a Search Statement
      This page provides strategies for effective research searching through keyword combination. It covers the use of Boolean operators (AND, OR, NOT) for enhancing relevancy, explains phrase searching for exact matches, and introduces nesting for complex queries. Additionally, it discusses truncation for searching various word forms. These techniques aim to improve search outcomes in library catalogs and databases.
    • 7.6: Conclusion
      This page discusses the importance of research questions in directing research. It details the process of developing a research question from a general topic and highlights that this process is iterative, requiring researchers to refine their questions, keywords, and search statements as they deepen their understanding of the topic.


    This page titled 7: Search Strategies is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Walter D. Butler; Aloha Sargent; and Kelsey Smith via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.