IS 540: Course Syllabus

Summer, 2005
116 Claxton Addition
William C. Robinson
Office: Communications 455
Phone: 865-974-7918
Email: wrobins1@utk.edu [best way to reach me]
Website: http://web.utk.edu/~wrobinso
Office hours: 2.00 - 5.30 Tuesday
{I may be available at other times. Please check my office. If I'm there, I can probably see you}.


Disabilities

If you need course adaptations or accommodations because of a documented disability or if you have emergency information to share, please contact the Office of Disability Services in 191 Hoskins Library or call them at 865-974-6087. This will insure that you are properly registered for services. It is also important to discuss these issues with the teacher.

Course Purpose

This course introduces the practice of social science research with some emphasis on how this might be used in information agencies. The course should be helpful for those who consume research while working in information agencies as well as those who will conduct research in order to aid decision-making or as an academic.

Course Objectives

When the course has been completed, the student should be able to:

Prerequisites

There are no prerequisites for this course. Some familiarity with problems and issues of concern to libraries and other information agencies is helpful.

Course Format

One three hour meeting per week with an emphasis on lecture. There will be some opportunity for questions and discussion. This course will be presented in a desktop to desktop mode using Centra software on Wintel computers. Knoxville students may attend in the Claxton Addition 116 class room or take the course from home. If only a few students wish to take the course on campus, we will likely use the computers in the 440 and 450 suites instead.

This is an introductory survey course intended to present basic information about social science research. The course is not comprehensive. Rather, you should leave the course with the feeling that your foot is in the door, and you know enough to continue on your own.

Class attendance is important, but is not required. Attendance will be considered in the student's final grade if course performance is poor. The teacher will post a note on UTKSIS-l and UTKSISDE if he is unable to meet the class.

This summer session provides ten rather than fifteen weeks of instructional time. This means that some course content will not be presented in class.

Resources

A thoughtful introduction to the library research agenda is found in Research Questions for the Twenty-first Century edited by Mary Jo Lynch and published in Library Trends [ vol 51 (4)].

The required textbook for this course is Conducting Research: Social and Behavioral Science Methods by Lawrence T. Orcher [Pyrczak Publishing]. This is practical, quick and relatively easy. Please skim the whole book as soon as possible so that you will know what's where.

The recommended textbook for this course is Fred Pyrczak's Evaluating Research in Academic Journals [Pyrczak Publishing. His treatment is more detailed than that in the teacher's lecture notes and includes much additional information. It should help you with the evaluation assignment.

The student interested in qualitative research and the thesis option should consider Qualitative Research Practice: A Guide for Social Science Students and Researchers by Ritchie and Lewis.

The student interested in historical research should consider The Modern Researcher [5th or later edition] by Barzun and Graff.

Although there may be some problems, Internet research is increasingly popular. Claire Hewson's [et al] Internet Research Methods: a practical guide [H 61.95 H48 2003] is helpful for the beginner.

There are several useful websites devoted to various aspects of research. Here are three to begin with.

  1. Research Methods in the Social Sciences: An Internet Resource List
  2. Resources for Methods in Evaluation and Social Research
  3. The Researching Librarian includes web sources useful for the librarian researcher
  4. Statistics and Statistical Graphics Resources

The University of Tennessee Statistical Consulting Service provides a variety of services, including training seminars. Students who will complete a thesis should be familiar with this source.

Course Assignments & Due Dates

Written work must be clearly written and well organized. If in doubt, follow the example in a research periodical of your choice. Margins should be set at one inch all around. Use a 12 point font, double spacing, and page numbering. Include a header with your name and the assignment on each page. While length is up to you, edit carefully to insure that all is clear and direct. Minimize direct quotations. Style questions may be answered in the Chicago Manual of Style or its popular offspring by Turabian.

DE students should deliver their assignments to the BlackBoard DropBox. Knoxville students may do the same or deliver their work in class. All work should be in .rtf or MS Word .doc formats. Do include your full name and your current email address on the first page.

In addition to assignment specifics, all written work will be evaluated using these criteria:

  1. Quality of the presentation -- neat and free from error
  2. Quality of the writing -- clear, direct, and correct
  3. Quality of the organization -- smooth,logical flow of content
  4. Quality and amount of reflection, analysis, comparison, and evaluation
  5. Use of the appropriate literature

Work will receive a lower grade if it is not written in correct, standard English. Late Assignments may not be accepted unless prior arrangements have been made. Legitimate emergencies are an exception to this policy. If an extension is granted, a late penalty may be imposed in order to be equitable for those students who met the deadline.

The following convention is used in evaluating student work:

Please see the teacher if you have special needs, objectives, or problems.

Course Schedule
31 May Introduction & Nature of Research
7 June Getting Started
Discussion Question: Why should a student complete a thesis?

Text: Chapters 1 - 4.

WCR lecture notes: importance of research, impact of research on practice, introductory comments

Assignment 1 due: Research in the News

14 June Methods & Design
Discussion Question: How is research seen in the popular media?

Text: Chapters 5 - 9

WCR lecture notes: assumptions, hypothesis, operational definitions, and sampling [4 lecture notes]

21 June Data Collection
Discussion Question: What sort of data might be useful to a library manager?
Evaluation of research paper assignment due

Text: Chapters 11 - 15

WCR lecture notes: data collection, coding data, interviews, and questionnaires [4 lecture notes]

28 June Data Analysis
Discussion Question:What do you know about statistics?
Introduction/problem statement section of research paper due

Text: Chapters 8 - 9, 16 - 19

WCR lecture notes: measurement

5 July Research Report
Discussion Question: What are the major problems facing the writer of a research report?

Literature review section of research paper due

Text: Chapter 23

WCR lecture notes: writing the research report, the research proposal, the paper title, the problem statement, and the literature review

12 July Assessment
Discussion Question: How important is research in library decision-making?
Methodology section of research paper due

Text: Appendix D

WCR lecture notes: impact of research on practice, importance of research

19 July Qualitative Research: Foundations
Discussion Question: Is qualitative research "real" research?

Text: capters 9, 12, 15, 19, and appendix C

26 July Qualitative Research: Methods
Discussion Question: How would you capture student behavior in the children's room?

Text: Chapter 9

Results section of research paper due.

2 August Bibliometric Research
Discussion Question: Faculty members may or may not be promoted based on a citation quote to their published work. Reasonable?

Discussion section of research paper due.

Course Assignments

Assignment 1

Find an article reporting on some research finding in a popular print source such as a news magazine or a newspaper. Please answer these questions:

  1. How did you know that "real" research was involved?
  2. Who was responsible for the research? Their affiliation?
  3. How is the research presented? Are findings separated from conclusions? Are facts separated from interpretations? Does the research seem believable?
  4. How easy would it be to locate a copy of the actual research report?
  5. Your conclusions on scholarly or professional research as seen in the popular media?

Worth 15 points.

Assignment 2

Find a research article in a scholarly periodical of your choice. Critique the article on an element by element basis beginning with the title and ending with the references. Conclude with a summary comment on the quality of the research paper as published with specific suggestions for improvement.

Worth 20 points.

Different evaluation checklists are available. Fred Pyrczak"s Evaluating Research in Academic Journals provides detailed guidance and will be useful for those planning on a thesis. You may also wish to review the teacher's lecture notes on the literature review on his website. Here is a rather short list:

Assignment 3: Research Paper

Complete a research project that, on a smaller scale, includes all of the elements of a published research paper. You may select a topic of your choice, but it should be approved by the teacher. I will be pleased to work with you to create a bite-sized research topic of your choice. The purpose of this class is to give you the experience of organizing and completing a research project. The topic itself is not important except that it should be of some personal interest. For those interested in doing a thesis, this project should get you started.

Please note that if your research project involves human subjects in a formal way, you will need to have your project approved by the Human Subjects Committee in the College to insure that there is no harm to the subjects. I can tell you how to do that, but the process takes some time.

If at a loss, you may select one of the topics below or reshape them to suit.

Each of the major parts of the research project is worth 100 points. These parts are:

  1. Introduction and problem statement
  2. Review of the literature
  3. Methodology
  4. Results
  5. Discussion [Conclusions and recommendations for further research].

Both the text and the materials on the IS 540 website should be helpful. The slide sets for the course will be available on BlackBoard a few days before class.

You might also look at published articles in appropriate periodicals to see how published authors have handled these sections [understand that your research effort likely involve only a few cases and a much less extensive treatment] Having a model or template substantially reduces the research effort.

The introduction and problem section answers these questions:

The review of the literature answers these questions:

The methods section answers these questions:

The results section answers these questions:

The discussion section answers these questions:

Suggested Topic 1

Identify twenty chapter books for children with different publication dates aimed at a similar audience [use grade level or age]. Using a readability formula of your choice, measure the degree of difficulty in the text to see if that has changed over time. Are contemporary books easier to read than those published earlier? You could also do a similar study with a small nuber of text books if you had access to earlier and more recent editions.

Suggested Topic 2

Select a scholarly periodical. Find a recent issue and one five years old. Take the first fifteen references from the first five articles in each issue. Classify citations or references to learn more about these variables: format, date of publication, number of authors, and place of publication. Has literature use changed over time? Implications for collection development?

Suggested Topic 3

As in Topic 2, but here check references in WorldCat to learn more about: subject dispersion (use the two-letter LC class) and the number of libraries holding the item. How important is subject dispersion in this discipline or profession? Are most of the items used commonly available? Has this changed over time?

Suggested Topic 4

Using fifteen recent genre fiction titles from the library or your own personal collection, evaluate cover content. Consider these variables: title length and appeal elements, font size for author and title, use of quoted passages or "blurbs," and the image used on the cover.

Suggested Topic 5

Use one of the standard reviewing sources. Select a recent issue that includes a reasonable number of biographies. Measure the sex, race/ethnic background, and occupation of the person being written about in 20 books each in two different issues [ one current and one five years ago] to identify change over time. Has there been a change in the type of person written about over time?

Suggested Topic 6

Using a best list of your choice, find five authors of books for adults and five authors of children's books. How many of these authors have a personal website [rather than a publisher one]? Using one of the website evaluation lists, evaluate the quality and utility of the websites. Are the websites of the two different types of authors similar or different?

Suggested Topic 7

Informally interview library staff members about their personal reading habits:


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