Know where to start your research
Learn how to develop your research skills
Be able to choose between Google and the Library's website for your sources
Your research assignments are designed to help you develop an important life skill - the skill of finding, evaluating and using information to answer questions and develop new ones. This is a pretty important life skill that you will use to write your essays, buy a new car or complete a very important report for your boss at work.
This conversation has been going on for a very long time with many different viewpoints. Your paper is part of this conversation and you know you should look at sources with opposing viewpoints to engage in this dialogue.
You’ll start out finding information on the simple questions like “what does my topic mean?” Once you know the answer to the simple questions, you will move onto finding sources that help answer the more fundamental questions of your topic like “why does this matter?”
You ask relevant questions about the origin, context, and suitability of the information before you use it. You understand that there are authorized forms of information for discipline or career specific situations (like peer reviewed journals).
You understand that different types of formats (a book vs. a Tweet) will affect quality of information.
You try different keywords to find a broad range of information sources (books, journals, newspapers) and seek out different avenues (Databases, Government websites etc.,).
You understand that citing is a legal responsibility to respect the work of others just as your work should be respected.
It’s true you can find some good sources by searching Google, but the majority of academic level sources you need for your assignment are locked into expensive databases owned by private companies.
The Library pays for access to these databases and as a student, you have free access to them if you search through the Library's website.
You can still use Google to search for government or non-government reports, but remember, relying just on Google for your sources won’t cut it at the University level.
You can start by looking through your textbook or course readings. In fact, there’s nothing wrong with using Wikipedia and Google to get an idea of what your topic is about.
After that, the next step is to find authoritative information, and for this you need to use the Library's website!