ENG 102 Locavore Research Intro

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Introducing the research process and information literacy to English 102 students studing food and globalism, Spring 2009

Transcript of ENG 102 Locavore Research Intro

INTRODUCINGRESEARCH

Elaine Fleming'sEnglish 102Spring 2009

Start with a Broad Topic

The assigned general topic: Food, Globalization, and the “Locavore” local food movement.

Pick a Focus

Globalization & Eating Locally

Business/ Economic

Issues

Cultural Implications

Health/ScienceImpacts

Narrow Your Focus• Business/Economic Issues

– Fair Trade and Developing Economies– Farmers Markets and Local Economies– Financial Cost of Negative Climate/Health Impacts

• Cultural/Humanistic Implications– The Loss of Regional Cultural Uniqueness– Shared Cultural Understanding through Food

• Health/Science Impacts– People

• Mass-Produced Foods and Hunger Alleviation• Mass-Produced Foods and Obesity• Traditional Indigenous Foods & Health

– Climate• Carbon Footprints and Global Warming• Pros and Cons of Eating Locally

Example: Narrowing the Topic

Food Globalizatio

n

Pros & Cons

Before You Search…

• Do you have a specific or well-developed question, idea, or thesis-statement?…OR…

• Do you have a vague or very general idea of what you want to research?

General Idea

• EXAMPLE:“I think I want to do something about Coca Cola and how it’s an example of globalism and what its effects are on communities.”

• Pick out the main concepts.• If it helps in your pre-research stage,

write a possible thesis statement.

Thesis Statement: The Point

• Sums up your paper.• Gives the reader a brief overview of

what you hope to tell them.• You can start out with one thesis

statement in the prewriting or research stage and end up with a totally different one in your final paper.

Example: Thesis Statement

• If you want to do a paper on how Coca Cola may be contributing to global health problems, you can write a thesis statement like:

• Coca Cola contributes to unhealthiness through globalism, including in Indigenous communities.

Example: Thesis Statement• Find possible search terms by isolating

specific concepts• Coca Cola contributes to

unhealthiness through globalism, including in Indigenous communities.

• Possible Search Terms:– Coca Cola– Unhealthiness– Globalism– Indigenous communities

Where to Find Information• Print Materials– Books– Magazines– Newspapers– Encyclopedias

• Electronic Resources– Databases– Websites

• Human Resources– Experts– Researchers

Library Resources

• LLTC Library– http://www.northstarca

talog.org/common/welcome.jsp?site=100&context=leechcollege

• KRLS Public Library System– http://kitchicat.krls.org

• BSU A. C. Clarke Library– Reciprocal usage

agreement– http://bsu.mnpals.net

Print Resources: Books

• May be specifically on topic:– Richard Wilk’s Fast Food/Slow Food: The

Cultural Economy of the Global Food System (available at BSU)

• May be tangentially-related to topic:– The Minnesota Homegrown Cookbook: Local

Food, Local Restaurants, Local Recipes (available through KRLS)

• Check the table of contents (front of the book) and the index (back of the book)!

Print Resources: Articles

• Search newspapers, magazines, journals

• Articles searchable online:– Electronic databases

available through LLTC

– Newspapers available in print and online

– Google Scholar

Electronic Resources: Articles

• Electronic databases available through LLTC– EBSCO– ProQuest Newspapers– INFOTRAC

• News sources available online:– CNN, MSNBC– National Public Radio– Newspapers (

Anishinaabeg Today, Bemidji Pioneer, Star Tribune)

• Google Scholar– http://scholar.google.com

Things to Keep in Mind

• Some personal web pages may contain biased or incorrect information.

• Wikipedia is not a good academic research source, because anyone can change or edit the articles, making it unreliable. Use it as a starting point but double-check with trustworthy sources.

More Things to Keep in Mind

• Evaluate sources on their:– Accuracy• Does the source contain errors or mistakes

or non-factual information?

– Authority• Was the author a credible expert? Was the

webpage from an official organization?

– Currency• When was the information source created

or last updated?

People Are Resources, Too!Ask questions and interview experts:• Cass Lake Farmers Market• Dennis Montgomery (LLTC instructor)• Harmony Co-Op in Bemidji• Headwaters Food Sovereignty Council• Leech Lake Nutrition Services• North Country Farmers Market• Gardeners and growers who purposefully

choose to sell or to eat locally-harvested meats and produce

If You Have Any Questions:

• About the assignment itself, contact your instructor Elaine.

• About research and resources, ask– Elaine– Your library staff