Reporting Literary Research - River Dell Regional School District
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Writing Workshop
Reporting Literary Research
Feature Menu
Assignment
Prewriting
Choose and Narrow a Research Topic
Consider Purpose, Audience, and Tone
Make a Research Plan
Get an Overview and Find Sources
Note Sources
Research and Take Notes
Analyze Research Information
Write a Thesis Statement
Make an Outline
Document Sources
Practice and Apply
Reporting Literary Research
Assignment
Assignment: Write a formal research paper of six
pages on a topic that links literature and historical
investigation.
Literary research involves the study of literary
works and the sources that shed light on them.
How do you think researching the history of a
period might help you understand a literary work,
its author, and the culture that produced it?
[End of Section]
Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Choose and Narrow a Research Topic
Consider the plays we’ve read
and what you know about
Shakespeare and the time
period during which he lived
and worked.
Do some preliminary research
(textbook, general reference
works, the Internet).
Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Choose and Narrow a Research Topic
Choose a general
literary topic.
Women in the plays
Prejudice in the plays
Decide on your
historical approach.
how the plays reflect the
culture of Renaissance
England
Themes in the plays
how Shakespeare’s life
influenced his writing
Marriage in the plays
Shakespeare’s comments
on life in his time
Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Choose and Narrow a Research Topic
Narrow your topic.
broad topic: Shakespeare’s plays and medieval culture
What interests me about
Shakespeare’s portrayal of
English culture?
how he portrays women
in society
What interests me about the
women in the plays?
Limited topic: how the complex female characters in
Shakespeare’s work reflect the conflicting ideas about
women’s roles at that time
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Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Consider Purpose, Audience, and Tone
Purpose: to inform
Audience: teacher and classmates
Tone: objective and formal (but not stuffy)
Your research paper will be an original synthesis
of ideas and information:
information
you gather
from
research
+
conclusions
you draw
from that
information
+
your own
insights
into the
topic
[End of Section]
Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Make a Research Plan
Use the 5W-How? method to make a list of
research questions:
Who
are the female characters in the plays?
What are their personalities like?
When did Renaissance women get involved in business?
Where did Renaissance women spend their leisure time?
Why were women’s activities restricted?
treat blah
women
How did
did men
blahbedy
blahduring
blah Shakespeare’s time?
[End of Section]
Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Get an Overview and Find Sources
Search for answers to your research questions.
• Look at general
reference works to get
an overview of your
topic.
• Then look for sources
with more specific
information.
• Explore both print and
nonprint resources.
Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Get an Overview and Find Sources
Search for answers to your research questions.
Some specific places to start:
online encyclopedia
school or local library’s subscription
databases
museums or historical societies
film or TV documentaries
periodical indexes, such as the Readers’ Guide to
Periodical Literature
Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Get an Overview and Find Sources
Include a balance of primary sources and
secondary sources.
Primary sources
Secondary sources
Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Get an Overview and Find Sources
Identify each of the following sources as
primary or secondary.
A letter Shakespeare wrote to his wife
primary
A journal article analyzing “Macbeth”
secondary
A video of an interview with a Shakespeare
scholar
secondary
A historical document stating that
Shakespeare was under King James,
patronage
primary
Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Get an Overview and Find Sources
To make sure a source is reliable and valid, ask:
• Are the facts accurate?
• Are the ideas presented objectively?
Reliable, valid sources are usually those published
by universities or respected publishing companies.
Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Get an Overview and Find Sources
Cover all relevant perspectives, or points of view.
Renaissance historians
Literary critics
Other writers
from the 1500s
women characters in
Shakespeare’s plays
Sociologists
Shakespeare biographers
Experts in
women’s studies
[End of Section]
Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Note Sources
Keep a record of your sources.
Make a source card, or bibliography card, for
each source.
Record the publishing information for your Works Cited
list (see the Writing Workshop for this collection
in your text).
Number each source. (You’ll use these handy numbers
as shorthand when you’re taking notes.)
Add an annotation—a short note about the
contents of the source.
Include the call number or location of the source.
Noodletools will simplify this process for you.
Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Research and Take Notes
Take notes on information that will help answer
your research questions.
Use a separate note card for each main idea.
Include the source number and the page number(s).
Write a heading showing the main idea.
Re-read the note to make sure you understand it.
Record each piece of information either as a direct
quotation, a paraphrase, or a summary.
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Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Analyze Research Information
Divide your notes into categories based on their
headings. Then subdivide each set based on relevant
aspects of the category.
Prioress
Appearance
Jewelry
Rosary
Interests
Fine forehead
Gold brooch
Animals
French
Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Analyze Research Information
To analyze your notes, ask:
Is the factual
information consistent?
If two sources conflict
in their presentation of
the facts, determine
which source is more
reliable and valid, and
use the information
from that source.
Do different sources
interpret factual
information differently?
If two sources differ on
an interpretation,
consider logic, common
sense, and different
perspectives, and then
explain the different
interpretations.
[End of Section]
Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Write a Thesis Statement
Assert yourself. Write a thesis statement stating your
topic and your conclusion about it.
Chaucer’s complex, often
inconsistent female characters
reflect the changing roles of
women in fourteenth-century
England.
[End of Section]
Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Make an Outline
Order, please. Think about the most effective order for
presenting your ideas. (You’ll probably use a combination of
organizational patterns.)
• chronological order—the
order in which events occur
• logical order—related
ideas are grouped together
• order of importance—
most important idea to least
important, or the reverse
Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Make an Outline
Make a formal outline.
I.
Introduction
A. Overview of research
B. Thesis statement
II. The Prioress
A. Appearance
1. Fine forehead
2. Jewelry
a. Green-beaded rosary
b. Gold brooch with motto
B. Interests/pleasures
1. French language
2. Animal lover
major divisions of
your paper
secondary divisions
supporting examples
specific details
[End of Section]
Reporting Literary Research
Prewriting: Document Sources
Plagiarizing is a form of cheating. Make sure to
document all sources in your paper to avoid taking
credit for others’ work.
how to
document
sources
See the examples in your textbook.
Every direct quotation
what to
document
Any original theory not your own
Data from studies and interviews
Anything you’re not sure of
[End of Section]
Reporting Literary Research
Use the preceding instructions to
• select a topic for your literary research paper,
• locate and record information from primary
and secondary sources,
• write a thesis statement, and
• plan your paper’s documentation.
Be sure to follow the guidelines for making source
cards and taking notes.
[End of Section]
The End