citation analysis

Submitted by Susan Archambault on September 22nd, 2017
Short Description: 

Lesson plan for a 1-hour introductory Communication Studies theory class. Emphasis is on getting students to use the appropriate tool for their information need while considering indicators of authority. Collection of exercises requiring students to do the following: 1) look up background information on a communication theory; 2) chase down further readings; 3) find a scholarly article that applies a communication theory using the ComAbstracts database. This supports an "interpersonal communication paper" where students outline and critique a communication theory and identify a study that applies the theory.

Attachments: 
AttachmentSize
Library Exercisesdisplayed 2139 times4.11 MB
Answer Key- Library Exercisesdisplayed 1415 times4.1 MB
Script for Sessiondisplayed 1559 times20.91 KB
Learning Outcomes: 

*Find background information on a communication studies theory *Find relevant previous research that is cited in encyclopedia articles *Find a peer-reviewed study that applies a communication theory *Pick out the main points in a theory-based scholarly article *Demonstrate an understanding of APA citation format

Individual or Group:

Course Context (e.g. how it was implemented or integrated): 

This supports an "interpersonal communication paper" where students choose a communication theory to outline and critique. They also must identify a study published in a peer-reviewed journal that applies the theory.

Suggested Citation: 
Archambault, Susan. "Scaffolding: exercises for introductory communication theory classes." CORA (Community of Online Research Assignments), 2017. https://projectcora.org/assignment/scaffolding-exercises-introductory-communication-theory-classes.
Submitted by Lucinda Rush on August 30th, 2017
Short Description: 

Students often depend on citation generators provided by databases, library discovery tools, and websites when tasked with correctly formatting their references. However, these generators often make mistakes that students don’t notice. This activity will help students to look critically at the citations provided by citation generators and to find the mistakes. This will both help students learn the citation style of their discipline and to look more critically at seemingly quick fixes during the research process.

Attachments: 
AttachmentSize
CitationGeneratorsActivity-2017-08-30LR.pdfdisplayed 1514 times94.67 KB
Learning Outcomes: 

Students will correctly cite resources using the citation style most pertinent to their area of study in order to appropriately reference information.

Discipline: 
Multidisciplinary

Individual or Group:

Course Context (e.g. how it was implemented or integrated): 
Additional Instructor Resources (e.g. in-class activities, worksheets, scaffolding applications, supplemental modules, further readings, etc.): 
Potential Pitfalls and Teaching Tips: 
Suggested Citation: 
Rush, Lucinda. "Citation Generators: Can You Trust Them?." CORA (Community of Online Research Assignments), 2017. https://projectcora.org/assignment/citation-generators-can-you-trust-them.

Teaching Resource

Blog with activities and assignments from the Oregon State University Libraries' Effective Research Assignments workshop. Categories include Audience, Topic Selection, Exploration, and Critical Reading & Evaluation.

Submitted by Ryer Banta on March 3rd, 2016
Short Description: 

For this activity students are asked to imagine that they are organizing a party, specifically a scholarly party. Groups are given a starting article that they evaluate and use as a jumping off point for choosing a theme for their party and finding more sources. Their theme acts as an early version of a research question. Following citations backwards and forwards groups invite other scholars who would have relevant things to say about their theme. Students also assess gaps in their invite list and identify other scholars from different perspectives or discipline who should also be invited.

Learning Outcomes: 

By the end of the session, students will be able to: - evaluate the benefits of thinking of scholarship as a conversation - use appropriate criteria in order evaluate individual sources and search results in their own research projects - use effective techniques to narrow a topic and select appropriate databases and publications in order to conduct effective and efficient searches in their own research projects - evaluate the utility of source evaluation criteria and search techniques from this activity

Information Literacy concepts:

Individual or Group:

Course Context (e.g. how it was implemented or integrated): 

This activity was originally designed for a first year University Studies seminar class.

Additional Instructor Resources (e.g. in-class activities, worksheets, scaffolding applications, supplemental modules, further readings, etc.): 

The lesson plan, activity worksheet and assessment questions are included as Google Doc links that can be copied or downloaded in your preferred file format. These works by Ryer Banta are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Potential Pitfalls and Teaching Tips: 

Tips on adapting the activity: There are a few sections that you will need to add some relevant local information and directions to. I have comments on each of these that require these additions. Tips for choosing starting articles: Since I designed this activity for first year students and with them I've had most success giving all groups the same starting article. I choose an open access source that is well cited, but not too old. I also tried to find one that was broadly interesting to them and the subject of the course. It is also possible to choose several different sources that explore narrow aspects of a broad topic. For example, the broad topic could be 'wind energy', and sources could range from public perception, to engineering, to wildlife management, and more. Tips for facilitating the activity and timing: This activity as written will typically take groups about 20 minutes, though it can seem tight, especially if they are not used to doing much group work. So make sure to keep the groups moving along. Make sure you have enough time to debrief. Cut or streamline some sections of the activity if you need to save time, or focus students on some parts more than others. Some groups try to divide up the steps of the activity, but each step is really meant to build on the previous.

Suggested Citation: 
Banta, Ryer. "Scholarly Party ." CORA (Community of Online Research Assignments), 2016. https://projectcora.org/assignment/scholarly-party.
Submitted by Desirae Zingarelli-Sweet on August 11th, 2015
Short Description: 

This assignment asks students to map scholarly citations in order to illustrate the concept that scholarship is a conversation. Secondarily, the activity is meant to demonstrate the constructed and contextual nature of authority in academic discourse. It can be used to help students build up to completing an annotated bibliography, research paper, or presentation that requires scholarly sources.

Attachments: 
AttachmentSize
Created in Microsoft Powerpoint (using shapes)displayed 2376 times242 KB
Citation Mapping for Religious Studies Assignment_DZ_updated-2016-06.docxdisplayed 2015 times26 KB
Learning Outcomes: 

• Identify citations within a given book or article and look them up using Google Scholar. • Find newer works that cite a given article or book using Google Scholar. • Identify connections between scholarly books/articles by comparing their citations. • Recognize standard elements of Chicago style citations.

Individual or Group:

Suggested Citation: 
Zingarelli-Sweet, Desirae. "Citation Mapping for Religious Studies." CORA (Community of Online Research Assignments), 2015. https://projectcora.org/assignment/citation-mapping-religious-studies.

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