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14.1: Writing with Sources

  • Page ID
    223153
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    In your college classes, you will be asked to conduct research using a variety of credible sources to support your ideas. Although you may know a great deal about your given topic when you begin the research process, you will likely find that there are many peripheral issues around this topic that you have yet to consider or do not fully understand yet—this is where sources come in handy. The academic equivalent of "phoning a friend," source use allows you to tag in experts with years (and sometimes decades) of experience studying your topic to help you expand your own ideas and make your arguments more convincing. For example, a general audience might not take a college student at face value when they say that laptop use in the classroom is beneficial, but if said student corroborates their ideas with the researched claims of experts on the subject of technology use in educational settings, they are much more likely to make their case successfully.

    While previous assignments may have required that you engage with sources on more of a surface level, research assignments at the college level will require you to interact with source material much more rigorously to demonstrate your awareness of the existing discourse around your chosen topic(s) and solidify your membership within a larger community of scholars. It will not be enough to simply cherry-pick a few ideas here or there that support a predetermined position; instead, you will need to understand how various sources relate to one another, and determine what this relationship indicates about the strengths and weaknesses of your own everevolving perspective. Before you can do any of this, though, you first need to know what types of sources will best help you to develop your ideas, and you need to feel confident distinguishing a credible source from a non-credible one


    14.1: Writing with Sources is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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