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Research Report, you will seek out relevant to your research question, extracting ideas from them

End of Week 2. Submit your work through the “Library Research Report” submission link in Week 2. 400-600 words. 4-6 entries; about 60-120 words per source . Answering a research question involves seeking out and processing information that helps you answer that question. This is true whether you are researching insurance plans or conducting academic research. In developing the Library Research Report, you will seek out relevant to your research question, extracting ideas from them that you will later synthesize into a final report (i.e., the final version of your project) and an answer–however tentative–to your research question. On its face, the library research report may seem to resemble what is sometimes called an “annotated bibliography.” Please note, however, that your goal in developing this report is not simply to summarize sources. As you write your summaries, you will be producing “building blocks” for the first draft of your Research Project . This means that you should be summarizing . Your writing should also be clear and accessible to non-specialist readers. A carefully constructed Library Research Report will significantly lighten your workload when you reach Week 3, since you’ll be able to construct your draft from writing you’ve already completed rather than producing an entirely new document. Your finished Library Research Report should include: ◻Your name at the top of the document. (You can follow strict APA if you’d like and include a separate title page, but this is not required.) ◻Your research question (at the top of the report) ◻Complete and correct citations for 4-6 accessed through NU Library databases ◻A 60-120 word paragraph on each source that answers the following questions: WHO? Who stands behind the information? Your entry should identify (quickly and concisely) the background/credentials that connect the article’s author/s to the topic. (See the Week 2 reading on identifying scholarly sources for guidance and examples: ) WHAT? Identify a claim (or claims) presented in the article that is relevant to your inquiry. (Remember, your task is not to summarize the entire article, but to summarize the article content that is relevant for your own inquiry. In some cases, of course, the entire article may be directly relevant to your project.) HOW? How is the claim supported? How do the authors back up the claim? (Don’t go nuts here and summarize every detail of the methodology. Instead, strive for the kind of concise, general summary one might find in a news account of recent research findings.) SO WHAT? What is the relevance of the claim for your inquiry? (Sometimes you’ll be able to express the “what” and “so what” at the same time, in which case you shouldn’t try to artificially separate them. Just make sure that your paragraph addresses all of the categories–WHO, WHAT, HOW, and SO WHAT? And remember that your answer to the “so what?” question should point to your own research inquiry.) Tip! If you’re having trouble getting started, tackle each of the above questions—Who/What/How/SoWhat? —one at a time.  Before you know it, you’ll have written—or at least sketched out–your first paragraph. Quote only when you need to call attention to key terms or phrases. Use complete sentences, correct spelling and punctuation, etc. Click on the link below to view the Sample Library Research Report: This assignment requires you to engage with specialist sources–specifically, peer-reviewed journal articles. If a source you’ve found is a peer-reviewed journal article, you should be able to answer “yes” to all of the questions below: □ CONTENT Does the source read like a scholarly article? (If it sounds more like a news article or a review, it’s probably not a scholarly article.) □ CITATIONS/REFERENCES Does the article include in-text citations and end references? Is the Reference list fairly substantial (i.e., more than just a handful of citations)? □ CREDENTIALS Is the author’s institutional affiliation noted? (For example, does a university or government email address accompany the byline? Or is there a bio that explains the author’s area/s of expertise?) □ PEER-REVIEWED Is the journal listed in Ulrichsweb as peer-reviewed? (For a review of how to use Ulrichsweb, see the Journal Databases Activity.  Remember that you search Ulrichsweb by journal title, not by article title.) Feel free to use citation-generator tools such as those found in library databases; just remember to check these computer-generated citations carefully. Here is a short APA reference sheet you may find helpful: You’ll notice that APA no longer requires that you identify the database from which you retrieved an article. It’s fine, though, if you want to include this information. (Some instructors still prefer to see this information included.) ◦ Widen the lens. Remember, a “relevant” source is rarely a source on your exact topic. As noted in the Journal Databases Activity and in this week’s ,” a relevant peer-reviewed source is any source that can help you bring a scholarly perspective to your topic. ◦ Ask for help from an NU reference librarian: ◦ Where appropriate, bring in one or two (1-2) high-quality sources that are not peer-reviewed journal articles. For example, your searching may uncover an in-depth piece of investigative reporting or a major government report that is relevant to your topic. For a review of how to distinguish between a regular news report and an in-depth news report, see (specifically the sub-section titled “News sources sometimes offer original, in-depth reporting on a topic.”)  For each source you include in your week-2 report that is not peer-reviewed, take extra care to establish who stands behind the information and why the information can be regarded as reliable. Note: Points will be deducted for deviations from assignment requirements/specifications. Greater deviations will result in greater deductions. Per course policy, scores of 50% and higher are reserved for submissions that attempt to meet assignment requirement/specifications. Source selection meets assignment requirements; sources are strong and skillfully chosen for direct relevance and for the substance and complexity they bring to the inquiry.Source selection meets assignment requirements; sources are strong and relevant to the inquiry.Sources meet assignment requirements. A small percentage of the sources may exhibit problems such as insufficient currency, relevancy, or depth.Sources mostly meet assignment requirements, but a significant percentage of the sources exhibit problems such as insufficient currency, relevancy, or depth.Sources mostly do not meet assignment requirements.  Many source-selection problems.What? and So What? are addressed clearly, concisely, and accurately.What? and So What? are addressed clearly and accurately.What? and So What? are, for the most part, addressed clearly and accurately.What? and So What? are addressed unclearly or inaccurately in several parts of the report.What? and So What? are addressed unclearly or inaccurately in most parts of the report.How? question is addressed clearly, concisely, and accurately.How? question is addressed clearly and accurately.How? question is, for the most part, addressed clearly and accurately.How? question is addressed unclearly or inaccurately in several parts of the report.How? question is addressed unclearly or inaccurately in most parts of the report.Who? question is addressed clearly, concisely, and accurately.Who? question is addressed clearly and accurately.Who? question is, for the most part, addressed clearly and accurately.Who? question is addressed unclearly or inaccurately in several parts of the report.Who? question is addressed unclearly or inaccurately in most parts of the report.Relationship between entry and research question is unambiguous; strong alignment between sources and inquiryRelationship between entry and research question is sufficiently clear; good alignment between sources and inquiryRelationship between entry and research question is unclear in places; some apparent misalignment between sources and inquiryRelationship between entry and research question is unclear in places and cannot be easily inferred; significant misalignment between sources and inquiryRelationship between entry and research question is unclear for most of the report; report content mostly does not align with inquiry as expressed in the research questionConfidence in use of Standard English, language reflects a practiced and/or refined understanding of syntax and usage.Conveys a good understanding of Standard English; the writer is clear in his/her attempt to articulate ideas, but may demonstrate moments of “flat” or unrefined language.Presence of sentence-level errors and awkwardness of expression, but not of such frequency and severity as to significantly impede understanding.Awkward expression and sentence-level errors occur frequently, often impeding understanding.Awkward expression and sentence-level errors occur throughout the report and significantly impede understanding.Adheres to APA citation format (MLA for arts/humanities majors)Adheres to APA citation format (MLA for arts/humanities majors); occasional citation errors are minor and are at the level of presentation.Evidence of attempt to adhere to APA citation format (MLA for arts/humanities majors), but with a few errors in presentation and content that could create some difficulty for readers trying to understand or locate sources. Insufficient adherence to APA citation format (MLA for arts/humanities majors); significant/communication-impeding errors in presentation and content of source citations.Major deviations from APA or MLA citation format Purchase the answer to view it