Reading and Reviewing

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Research Methods
Week 3: Reading and Reviewing

Course OverviewSpecial Needs Assistance

Week
Number
and/or Date
Lecture/Seminar/
Field Trip/Other
Topic/Theme/Title Assessment
Week 1 Lecture 1 The Research Process Pt1
Week 2 Lecture 2 The Research Process Pt1
Week 3 Lecture 3 Reading and Reviewing
Week 4 Lecture 4 Writing and Presenting
Information
Week 5 Lecture 5 Experimental Methods:
Overview and Research
Design
Week 6 Lecture 6 Experimental Methods:
Sample Design, Measurement
and Scaling
Week 7 Midterm
Week Number
and/or Date
Lecture/Seminar/
Field Trip/Other
Topic/Theme/Title Pre-reading
Week 1 Lecture 1 The Research Process Pt1
Week 2 Lecture 2 The Research Process Pt1
Week 3 Lecture 3 Reading, Writing and Reviewing
Week 4 Lecture 4 Presenting
Week 5 Lecture 5 Experimental Methods:
Overview and Research Design
Week 6 Lecture 6 Experimental Methods: Sample
Design, Measurement and
Scaling
Week 7 Midterm

Course Overview

Week
Number
and/or Date
Lecture/Seminar/
Field Trip/Other
Topic/Theme/Title Assessment
Week 7 Midterm 13 Nov
Assessment 2
Deadline
Week 8 Lecture 7 Experimental Methods:
Data Collection
Week 9 Lecture 8 Experimental Methods:
Data Analysis
Week 10 Lecture 9 Review of legal, ethical,
social and professional
issues
Week 11 Lecture 10 Assignment presentations
Week 12 Lecture 11 Commercialisation 11 Dec
Assessment 3
Deadline
Week 13 Lecture 12 Revision/ Assignment
support
Overview
What is Critical Reading?
-Critical Reading and Critical Thinking.
-Critical Thinking
How to Read Critically
Process of Critical Reading
….
Overview
What to read?
Front-line literature
Discerning front-line literature
The Internet
Reading Critically
Finding and evaluating the argument
Five Critical Synopsis Questions <cont>
Critical Reading
What is Critical Reading?
Critical Reading and Critical Thinking
Critical Thinking
How to Read critically
The Review Process
What is Critical Reading?

Facts vs. Interpretation
Non critical reading
Text = facts
What is written
Memorize facts
Critical reading
Text = portrayal of facts
What’s written and how
it’s written
Appreciate how a
perspective can lead to
an understanding.

Reaching for an Interpretation
Step 1: What the text says.
i.e. non critical reading.
Step 2: What the text does.
Examples? Argument? Sympathy? Contrast?
Step 3: What it means.
Based on earlier analysis.
Discussion
Step 1: What the text says.
> Restatement
Step 2: What the text does.
> Discussion discusses aspects of the discussion.
Step 3: What it means.
> Analysis analysis the text and asserts a
meaning for the text as a whole.

Goals
to recognize an author’s purpose
involves inferring a basis for choices of content and
language
to understand tone and persuasive elements
involves classifying the nature of language choices
to recognize bias
involves classifying the nature of patterns of choice
of content and language

Recognize and analyse
Critical reading is not simply close and careful
reading.
To read critically, one must
actively recognize
and analyze evidence
upon the page.
Analysis and Inference
Critical reading requires analysis and inference
Analysis
what we look for
involves recognizing those aspects of a discussion that
control the meaning.
Inference
How to think about what you find
interpretation of data from within the text
Example
‘The Senator admitted owning the gun that
killed his wife.’

Example
‘The Senator admitted owning the gun that
killed his wife.’
There is a Senator.
He owns a gun.
He is married.
His wife is dead.
That gun caused her death.
The Senator admitted owning that gun.
Inferences
The gun (or at least a bullet) has probably
been recovered and identified as the murder
weapon.
Or the admission of the senator would not make
sense.

Unwarranted inferences
We do not necessarily know if
The Senator’s admission is true
the Senator is responsible for his wife’s death
The wife died of gunshot wounds (she might have
been hit over the head with the gun)
It was murder (it may have been suicide)
Exercise
A man and his son are driving in a car. The car
crashes into a tree, killing the father and
seriously injuring his son. At the hospital, the
boy needs to have surgery. Upon looking at the
boy, the doctor says, “ I cannot operate on him.
He is my son.”
How?

“I cannot operate on him. He is my son.”
Implications For Reading
All reading is
Active
Reflective
A problem-solving process
Readers can use the notion of inference
equations
to test whether or not the
ingredients for a given inferences are indeed
present. …

Implications For Writing
Writers must assure that the ingredients of
the equation are
present
Clear
and that the desired relationships are signaled in a
clear and effective way.
As writers, we must be aware that our readers
will interpret our thoughts.

Critical Reading and Critical Thinking
Not critical-reading
Critical reading
Critical thinking

Non-critical (or pre-critical) reading
Recognizing what a text says about the topic.
Information.
Make sense of the text
Information
Ideas
Opinions
Linear activity
Critical reading
Analytic non-linear activity
The reader rereads a text to identify
patterns of elements –
information,
values,
assumptions,
and language usage
— throughout the discussion. These elements
are tied together in an
interpretation, an
assertion of an underlying meaning of the text
as a whole.

Critical thinking
Involves taking into account
outside knowledge,
biases,
and values
to evaluate the presentation and decide what
ultimately to accept as true.

Critical Reading and
Critical Thinking

Critical Reading v. Critical Thinking
Critical reading is a technique
for
discovering information and ideas within a
text.
Critical thinking is a technique
for
evaluating information and ideas, for
deciding what to accept and believe.

Example
“Parents are buying expensive cars for their
kids to destroy them.”

Example
“Parents are buying expensive cars for their
kids to destroy them.”
Critical reading
Critical thinking
Example
“Parents are buying expensive cars for their
kids to destroy them.”
Critical reading
Analysis – What does it mean?
Critical thinking
Evaluation – Do we believe it
Example
“Parents are buying expensive cars
for their kids to destroy them.”
Critical reading
Analysis – What does it mean?
Parents are buying expensive cars for
their kids to destroy
the expensive cars.
Critical thinking
Evaluation – Do we believe it
No.
Example – Alternative Interpretation
“Parents are buying expensive cars
for their kids to destroy them.”
Critical reading
Analysis – What does it mean?
Parents are buying the kids expensive
cars and don’t care that they do and if
they destroy them.
Critical thinking
Evaluation – Do we believe it
Yes, the parents are rich.
The Two Together in Harmony
Critical Reading
Critical Thinking
What does it mean
Is it reasonable

The Usefulness of the Distinction
Critical reading
Is objective.
We can read each text on its own merits, not imposing
our prior knowledge or views on it.
Important to be able to learn something new.
Reading Critically: How Well Does The
Text Do What It Does
Writer has a job to do:
a specific topic must be addressed
terms must be clearly defined
evidence must be presented
common knowledge must be accounted for
exceptions must be explained
causes must be shown to precede effects and to be
capable of the effect
conclusions must be shown to follow logically from
earlier arguments and evidence

Reading Critically: How Well Does The
Text Do What It Does
Tasks must be realized:
Completely
Comprehensively
Consistently
Thinking Critically:
Evaluating The Evidence
Critical thinking
Useful for real world tasks
Building roads, writing code, writing legislation etc.
We want to accept as fact only that which is actually
true
using our best judgment.
Truth is based on prior understanding and evidence.

Critical Thinking
Critical Thinking
Rationality
Self-awareness
Honesty
Open-mindedness
Discipline
Judgment

Rationality
Rely on reason rather than
emotion
,
Require evidence, ignore no known
evidence, and follow evidence
where it leads, and
Be concerned more with finding the
best explanation rather than being
right, analyzing apparent confusion
and asking questions.

Self-awareness
Know yourself.
Weigh the influences of motives and bias.
Recognize our own
Assumptions
Prejudices
Biases
point of view
Honesty
Recognize
emotional impulses
selfish motives
nefarious purposes
or other modes of self-deception
Open-mindedness
Evaluate all reasonable inferences.
Consider a variety of possible viewpoints or
perspectives.
Remain open to alternative interpretations.
Accept a new explanation, model, or paradigm
because it explains the evidence better, is
simpler, or has fewer inconsistencies or covers
more data.

Open-mindedness
Accept new priorities in response to a
reevaluation of the evidence or reassessment
of our real interests
Do not reject unpopular views out of hand.
Discipline
Precise, meticulous, comprehensive, and
exhaustive.
Resist manipulation and irrational appeals.
Avoid snap judgments.
Judgment
Recognize the relevance and/or merit of
alternative assumptions and perspectives
Recognize the extent and weight of evidence
Critical thinkers
Are skeptical. They approach texts with the same
skepticism and suspicion as they approach
spoken remarks.
Are active, not passive. They ask questions and
analyze. They consciously apply tactics and
strategies to uncover meaning or assure their
understanding.
Do not take an egotistical view of the world. They
are
open to new ideas and perspectives. They
are
willing to challenge their beliefs and
investigate competing evidence.

Exercise
What do you think the characteristics of a noncritical thinker might be?
Non-critical thinkers
They see things in black and white, as either-or,
rather than recognizing a variety of possible
understanding.
They see questions as yes or no with no subtleties.
They fail to see linkages and complexities.
They fail to recognize related elements.
They take an egotistical view of the world
their facts are the only relevant ones.
their perspective is the only sensible one.
their goal as the only valid one.

How to Read Critically

Exercise
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Now I want to share my good fortune with you. By following my simple instructions
you too can be a millionaire within just a few months. There is no risk and it just can’t
fail. I have already helped hundreds of people attain their dream of a new life. They
are so grateful to me – no longer do they worry about domestic bills, healthcare or
their children’s education. Their future is certain. And yours can be too.
Just call me on the number below, and I will send you my introductory pack free
of charge. It will explain to you how my failsafe method can bring you guaranteed
wealth and happiness. Call now, and let your life change forever for the better.”
18662178474
Exercise
What’s wrong with this?
Should we change our career?

Critical reading in Academia
In general academics aren’t charlatans, so why
do we need critical reading?

Reasonable skepticism
The authors mean to be honest, but may have been
misled by the evidence into saying something that I
consider untrue.
The authors mean to be logical, but may have
developed a line of reasoning that contains a flaw.
The authors mean to be impartial, but may have
incorporated into the account some assumptions that I
don’t share.
The authors mean to tell me something new, but may
not have taken into account other information that I
possess.

Exercise
‘In the reading test, the five children who were
taught to read using phonics performed better
overall than the five children taught using the
whole word method. This shows that the
phonics method is a better choice for schools.’

Exercise
1. What questions would you ask?
2. Where would you expect to find the
answers?

Exercise
Is a study of just ten children sufficient to draw such a
strong conclusion?
What does ‘performed better overall’ signify? Did some
children taught using the whole word method perform
better than some children taught using phonics? If so, what
does this mean for the results?
Were the differences between the two groups sufficiently
great for us to be satisfied that they would occur in a re-run
of the experiment with different subjects?
How were the two teaching programmes administered, and
might there have been ‘leakage’ of whole word teaching
into the phonics teaching and vice versa?

Exercise
What was the reading test actually testing, and might it
have been unintentionally biased to favor the children
taught using phonics?
What care was taken to check how parental involvement at
home might have influenced what and how the children
learned?
Were the two sets of five children matched for intelligence,
age, gender or other factors?
Is it reasonable to infer that what works well in a small
experimental study will work well in school environments?
How does Browning envisage phonics being used in
schools? Would there still be a place for the whole word
method?

Review
Browning (2005) found that children taught to read using
phonics did better in a reading test than children taught
using the whole word method. However, the study was
small, the test rather limited, and the subjects were not
tightly matched either for age or gender. An examination
of Browning’s test scores reveals that, although the mean
score of the phonics group was higher, two of the highest
scorers in the test were whole word learners. Since this
indicates that the whole word method is effective for
some learners at least, Browning is perhaps too quick to
propose that ‘the phonics method is a better choice for
schools’ (p. 89).

Critical Reading and Writing
Critical reading normally supports writing
Critical reading
assessing the extent to which authors have provided
adequate justification for the claims they make.
Depends on
what the authors have communicated
other relevant knowledge, experience and inference that
you are able to bring into the frame.
Self-critical writing
convincing your readers to accept your claims.
Effective communication of adequate reasons and evidence
for these claims.

Self Critical Writing
Demand of yourself evidence to back up your
claims;
Be alert to the possibility of making an illogical
jump in your reasoning;
Become sensitive to your own assumptions and
how they might affect your claims;
Realize the importance of checking the literature
thoroughly to ensure that your understanding is
sufficiently deep.
To be continued….

Being Critical as a Requirement of
Academic Study
Critical thinking and creativity: managing
creative processes in self and others; Organizing
thoughts, analysis, synthesis, critical appraisal.
This includes the capability to identify
assumptions, evaluate statements in terms of
evidence, detect false logic or reasoning,
identify implicit values, define terms adequately
and generalize appropriately.

Being Critical as a Requirement of
Academic Study
Be able to
Evaluating what you read
Relating what you read to other information
About assessing the quality of the case made
for evaluating and interpreting the facts in
some way rather than the ‘facts’ themselves.
Assessing the evidence and the validity of the
interpretation and generalisations.

Objects of Scrutiny
The evidence provided in the account;
Whether the reasoning of the author’s argument
follows logically to the conclusion that has been
drawn;
Explicit or implicit indications of the author’s
values and assumptions;
The match between the author’s claims and
those of other authors;
The match between the author’s claims or
predictions and the reader’s own research
evidence or knowledge.

Process of Critical Reading
Process of Critical Reading
Task Based Reading
Deciding What to Read
Reading Critically

Task-driven approach
Two components
Tasks
What you need to do
Questions
What you need to ask
?
Tasks
You have been told to read it in preparation for a class.
You are doing background reading on your subject, just
to get your bearings.
It reports a particular approach or technique that you
want to see in action.
It addresses a particular question that you want to
know the answer to.
You are looking for evidence to counter-balance
something else that you have read.
You have a particular story to tell, and you need some
supporting evidence for it.

Questions
Too vague
‘What did you do, and what did you find out?’ For
example
Better
Is this author’s method of investigation the best
one for me to emulate in my own work?
How does this author’s position compare with
that of another author whose work I’ve read?
Would this author challenge the claims that I am
making in my own work?

Questions
Helps to
Guide you to what you need to read.
Determine how thoroughly you read it.
Stay focused and maintain discipline
May mean reading the same paper twice
Saves time overall
There is simply too much literature to read
normally and be
led by the text after the initial
background reading stage.

What to read?
What to read
Deciding what to read
Types of literature
The internet

Why read?
Review a paper
Write a paper
Applying for funding
Research project
MSc/PhD
Developing a course
Etc.
Why read?
Review a paper
Write a paper
Research project
MSc/PhD
Develop a course
Etc.
You are doing research
the reading process is more or less the same

Deciding what to read
Two Stage strategy
Draw up a list of documents that look important
Create a shortlist of those that appear most useful
Long list
Use any recommended reading list for your module or subject area,
including those from past years.
Search the Internet for reading lists posted up for similar modules
at other universities, and identify texts that are repeatedly
recommended.
Look up one or two important texts in the library catalogue. Then
do a search using their subject code to see what else has been
classified as covering the same topic.
Go to the library shelves and see what is physically stored under the
same class mark as the key recommended texts.
Note how many copies the library has of a particular text. If there
are plenty, it has evidently been a recommended text at some
point.
As you begin to read, note texts that are often cited by others, and
whether positively or negatively (both may be useful).

Long list
Make a list of the three or four journals most often carrying
papers that have been recommended or frequently cited,
then check the back and current issues of those journals for
similar papers.
Use abstracts databases to search for papers via keywords
and author names that you associate with the topic.
Look through the catalogues (on paper or on-line) of the
leading academic publishers to see what has come out
recently.
Check what books have been reviewed in recent academic
journals.
Improvise, find out for yourself which methods help you to
find the most relevant material. …

From long-list to short-list
Short list should include some or all of;
a) An overview of what the key issues in the field are and
why they are important.
b) An overview of what has been done and found out, and a
summary of where the field of enquiry currently stands.
c) Papers that pose the question that you need to answer
with your research.
d) Some specific examples of the sorts of methodology,
results and analysis reported by individual researchers.
e) Answers to one or more specific questions that you have
been required, or have chosen, to address.
etc..

From long-list to short-list
Not just one paper..
A key component of your research will be to
combine and contrast information from different
sources.

Example reading lists?
Look at any high quality* academic research
paper and check the references.
The list of references is the short-list
The position of the citation tells us what the
reference refers to.

Types of literature
Support literature
Textbooks
Readers, handbooks and encyclopedias
Front line literature
Journal and conference papers, theses, tech reports
etc.
Discerning front line literature

discern
verb (used with object)
1.to perceive by the sight or some other sense or by the
intellect; see, recognize, or apprehend:
They discerned a sail on the horizon.”
2.to distinguish mentally; recognize as distinct or different;
discriminate
discerning
adjective
1.showing good or outstanding judgment and understanding
a discerning critic of French poetry.”
Textbooks
Skills textbooks
to help you learn such things as how to design a
robust investigation or analyze data statistically.
Subject textbooks
introduce readers to a field of academic
enquiry, and are explicitly designed to support
students’ learning.

Textbooks
Relatively cheap compared with research materials.
Words like ‘introduction’, ‘guide’ or ‘study’ appear in
the title or the series title.
Available in softback, and have an eye-catching cover.
The title evidently encompasses a field or sub-field
rather than a particular research agenda (e.g.,
A Short
History of the English Language
) or else it covers a
particular skill (e.g.,
Statistics in the Social Sciences).
The cover blurb indicates a student target readership.
There are multiple copies in academic bookshops and
libraries. Also, popular textbooks often run to more
than one edition.

Textbooks
Good place to start
Overview of subject area
Identify front line texts
Limited for research
Basic
One commentators account
Prescriptive, authoritative
Often include subjective interpretations of original work,
you need to go to the source.
In the interest of offering a clear story they make strong
claims without proper evidence or over simplify
complicated issues.

Textbooks
Textbooks often give us the Hollywood version…
…you need to read the book
(or rather the original published papers)
.

Readers, Handbooks and
Encyclopedias
Readers
Handbooks
Enclopeaedias

Readers
Collections of classic
papers in particular
research field.
Personal selection of editors,
may not be considered
representative by other
authors.
Normally full papers are
included, but sometimes
necessary to check the
original.

Handbooks and Specialist
Encyclopedias
Like readers but articles are commissioned.
Overviews of research, theory or methodology.
Useful for gaining an understanding of the stateof-the-art.
Like papers, written from the authors perspective.
Sometimes in the reading process, it’s better to
form your own perspective by selectively reading
front line material.

Over-reliance on support literature
Referring to ideas and evidence without referring
to the
original source.
Giving references to works without having read
them yourself.
Referring just to works mentioned in the support
text.
Using secondary referencing, e.g. ‘Jones (cited in
Smith, 2009) found …’.
Plagiarizing by presenting an identical or slightly
rewritten version of the support text, as if you
had done the reading and thinking.

Front-line literature
Front-line literature
Types of front-line literature
Discerning front-line literature
Types of front-line literature
Theoretical descriptions and explanations
Reports of original research
Accounts of current practice
Policy statements

Theoretical Descriptions and
Explanations
Models the way things are (or should be), by
using
evidence
Experiments
Observations
Experience
Ideas
(not necessarily from the authors themselves)
… to identify patterns.
Which can be formalized into a model..
.. to make future predictions (i.e. hypotheses)
Theoretical Descriptions and
Explanations
How theory and evidence interact through
modelling

Theoretical Descriptions and
Explanations
Model can
Help deepen understanding
Anticipate future observations
Strengthen case for making changes
Theoretical Descriptions and
Explanations
Example
A paper presents a predictive model for the
consumption of earths natural resources
The model predicts that, at current rates of
consumption, some resources will be used up within
fifty years.
This study could be used to
Criticize policy
Recommend change
Influence thought
Etc.
Reports of original research
AKA data-driven literature.
Observations about the real world, often
related to a prediction or
hypothesis derived
from a
model.
Reports of original research
Data
Observational
Experimental
Situation manipulated by the researcher
Observational-experimental (between the two)
Observing two contrasting groups or situations that occur
naturally (a natural experiment).
Observation in which the researcher participates in the
observed activity or situation (participant observation).
Detailed observation of one or more individuals or groups
with the same, or contrasting, profiles (case studies).

Reports of original research
Results can
deepen understanding
Help explain problems
Demonstrate why a method works better than
another
Influence changes in policy or practice
etc.
Practice literature
Accounts of how things are done,
Written by experience practitioners
Features strongly in applied fields of enquiry
focusing on practical activity e.g. nursing
To recommend practices that are most effective,
or identify shortcomings.
For example,
A personal illustration of how a nurse working for a
relief agency has learned to cope with the extreme
demands of over-crowded refugee camps.

Policy literature
Emphasizes changes that improve practice,
Written by policy makers
Features strongly in applied fields of enquiry
focusing on practical activity (as with practice
literature)
For example,
The government publish a report describing a fault in
practice, proposing an alterative policy as a remedy
A pressure group with different values publish a critical
report suggesting an alternative policy

Discerning front-line literature

Discerning front-line literature
A skill that is learnt over time
Useful indicators
Top Journals; Science, Nature .. Information
Visualization, BMC bioinformatics (in
my field) etc.
Journal papers with Thomas Routers impact factor
Book publishers Springer, Elsevier, Academic Press etc.
Indexed papers IEEE, ACM, SPIE etc.
Author reputation (Citation indexes)
Position of big author (1st, 2nd, 3rd or last)
Number and quality of citations to a paper
Position in web searches (?)
Discerning front-line literature
Content:
Reading these three sections (in this order) can
normally give you a good idea of the content and
quality of a paper.
Abstract
Conclusion
Introduction
If the paper is poorly written, confused* or vague
then stop reading. Life is too short.
Discerning front-line literature
*Paper is confused
Internal inconsistencies
Lack of clarity or unnecessary complexity
Unsubstantiated assertions
Stop reading
You are confused
Concepts are inherently complex
You lack the background knowledge to understand the
assertions made
Take your time and refer to support literature or
references. Keep reading.

The Internet

Opportunities
Fantastic source of material
Especially with links to e-resources at XJTLU
Convenient
Optimized for research
Academic roots
Hyperlinks are like references
Sources linked to citations
Export to endnote etc.
Dangers
Copy and Paste
Passing work found on the internet as your own is
plagiarism and carries harsh penalties.
Reliability
The internet is a huge, amoral, uncoordinated
dissemination forum.
Anyone can say anything.
Solution
Use the internet as a catalogue rather than as
a repository for information.
Always refer to the original resources (which
are often linked to).
Don’t copy and paste.
Internet resources for research
Google Scholar
Microsoft Academic Search
Citeseer
DBLP Bibliography
Online bibliographies
Author homepages
University Course Pages
Internet Material
Likely to be reliable
Peer-reviewed journal articles that are also published
in an academic journal.
Peer-reviewed journal articles published in genuine
electronic journals.
Already published journal articles and book chapters
that have been posted on an academic’s home page.
Electronically readable books written by subject
experts
Official materials published on a recognized
institutional website

Internet Material
Likely to be fairly reliable
Pre-peer-reviewed material, as described in (3)
above – but track down the published version if
possible.
2 Lecture or research notes on the site of an
academic working at a recognized institution.

Internet Material
Likely to be unreliable:
Material on the home pages of individuals.
Material on organization websites that is written
by enthusiasts rather than experts.
3 Free-for-all post-your-views sites (unless
restricted to a recognized set of academic
contributors).
Web-logs (blogs), chatroom, pontifications, etc.
Referencing Internet Sources
1. Use a, more permanent, print version where possible.
2. Attribute the material to a person if possible.
3. If (and only if) no author is named, give the
institutional details instead.
4. Give the date when it was posted or last updated.
5. Indicate the date on which you last accessed it.
6. Double check the URL.
Wray, A. (2010) ‘What is formulaic language?’,
www.cardiff.ac.uk/encap/research/networks/flarn/whatis/i
ndex.html (accessed 5 January 2010).

Reading Critically

Reading Strategies
Scanning – looking through a text to find
specific sections or key words and phrases
indicating where the information you are
seeking is located.
Skimming – reading quickly through those
parts of a text that can give you an overview
of the content.
Intensive reading – carefully reading every
word of a text from beginning to end.

Balanced Strategy
Scan and Skim first to find what might be
useful.
Read the more important texts in more detail.
Summary
Critical Reading
Active
Objective
Analysis
Inference
Task driven
Summary
Critical Reading
Active
Objective
Analysis
Inference
Task driven
Focus on what to look for in a text
Identify and Evaluate the Argument
Central and Review Question
Central Question
Broad, covers research task
Review Questions
More specific
Derived from a broader central question
Can;
Directly contribute to central question
Help with theoretical questions
Justify methodology
Central and Review Question
Central Question
‘Can Information Visualization help with IR’
Review Questions
‘Can IV be used with text’
Directly contribute to central question
‘How can I design IV software to handle text’
Help with theoretical questions
‘What can I learn from other IV software with text’
Justify methodology
Evaluating Usefulness
Not everything is equally useful
Articles should
Contribute directly to your task
Be reliable
Be plausible
Extreme views should be treated with caution
Evaluating Usefulness
Not everything is equally useful
Articles should
Contribute directly to your task
Be reliable
Be plausible
Extreme views should be treated with caution
We need to identify and evaluate the
argument.

Argument
Argument = Conclusion + Warranting
Conclusion:
One or more claims that something is, or should be, the
case.
Warranting:
The justification for why the claims should be accepted.
Normally based on evidence from research or personal
experience. Sometimes based on evidence from the
literature.
A robust conclusion is one that is sufficiently
warranted
by appropriate evidence.
Argument
Argument-warranting=Opinion
“Correlation between CO2 emission and rising
temperature does not by itself warrant the
conclusion of a causal relationship.”

Argument
Authors job: Provide the best possible
warranting for their conclusion.
Your job: Judge whether the warranting is
enough to make the conclusion convincing
and so whether to accept or reject the
conclusion.

Exercise
“For example, one practitioner researcher commented
that ‘I think that my TLRP [Teaching and Learning
Research Programme] experience was very, very positive.
It caused me to reflect back on where I was and to accept
that I am really happy in FE [further education], that I
don’t want to be a lecturer in HE [higher education].’
Building research capacity is not just about building the
next cohort of professors and senior academics, it can
also relate to the building of one’s own personal capacity
to engage with research and practice.”
Claim? Warranting?

Exercise
For example, one practitioner researcher commented
that ‘I think that my TLRP [Teaching and Learning
Research Programme] experience was very, very positive.
It caused me to reflect back on where I was and to accept
that I am really happy in FE [further education], that I
don’t want to be a lecturer in HE [higher education].’
Building research capacity is not just about building the
next cohort of professors and senior academics, it can
also relate to the building of one’s own personal capacity
to engage with research and practice.

Claim Warranting
Exercise
For example, one practitioner researcher commented
that ‘I think that my TLRP [Teaching and Learning
Research Programme] experience was very, very positive.
It caused me to reflect back on where I was and to accept
that I am really happy in FE [further education], that I
don’t want to be a lecturer in HE [higher education].’
Building research capacity is not just about building the
next cohort of professors and senior academics, it can
also relate to the building of one’s own personal capacity
to engage with research and practice.

Claim Warranting Convincing?
What makes an argument convincing
Quote?
Number?
Percentage?
Statistic?
What makes an argument convincing
Quote?
Number?
Percentage?
Statistic?
Depends on the claim
Example
In the reading test, the five children who were
taught to read using phonics performed better
overall than the five children taught using the
whole word method. This shows that the
phonics method is a better choice for schools.

Example
In the reading test, the five children who were
taught to read using phonics performed better
overall than the five children taught using the
whole word method
. This shows that the
phonics method is a better choice for schools
.
Browning (2005) found that children taught to read using
phonics did better in a reading test than children taught
using the whole word method. However, the study was
small, the test rather limited, and the subjects were not
tightly matched either for age or gender. An examination
of Browning’s test scores reveals that, although the mean
score of the phonics group was higher, two of the highest
scorers in the test were whole word learners. Since this
indicates that the whole word method is effective for
some learners at least, Browning is perhaps too quick to
propose that ‘the phonics method is a better choice for
schools’ (p. 89).

Browning (2005) found that children taught to read using
phonics did better in a reading test than children taught
using the whole word method. However,
the study was
small, the test rather limited, and the subjects were not
tightly matched either for age or gender
. An examination
of Browning’s test scores reveals that,
although the mean
score of the phonics group was higher, two of the highest
scorers in the test were whole word learners
. Since this
indicates that the whole word method is effective for
some learners at least,
Browning is perhaps too quick to
propose that ‘the phonics method is a better choice for
schools’
(p. 89).
Convincing Argument
Convincing Argument
=
Conclusion
(containing claims)
+
Adequate Warranting
(based on sufficient appropriate evidence)

Identifying the conclusion and
warranting of arguments
Key words;
therefore, because, since, so, it follows that, it can be
concluded that
Examples
Since research shows that girls mature faster than boys,
studies should take age and gender into account when
exploring child development.
Child development studies should take age and gender
into account
because research shows that girls mature
faster than boys.
Research shows that girls mature faster than boys.
Therefore, studies of child development should take age
and gender into account.

Identifying the conclusion and
warranting of arguments
Examples with weight on warranting implying
that conclusion is not universally true
In so far as girls are believed to mature faster than
boys, studies of child development should take age
and gender into account.
In conditions where girls mature faster than boys,
studies of child development should take age and
gender into account.
Where it is relevant to the investigation that girls
mature faster than boys, studies should take age and
gender into account.

Incomplete or flawed arguments
Conclusion without warranting
Potential warranting without conclusion
Warranting leading to an illogical conclusion
Conclusion not explicitly linked to warranting
Conclusion with inadequate warranting

Conclusion without warranting
“The best musicians make the worst teachers”
“Why do you think that? How do you know?”
“The eye for fine detail possessed by the best
musicians tends to make them over-critical and
discouraging with pupils (Goodman, 2009).”

Potential warranting without
conclusion
“Johnson’s research shows that people often
sign legal agreements without reading them.
Legal documents can be difficult to read”
So what? What do these different pieces of
evidence, together, imply
?”
“People may fail to read legal documents
because they are difficult to read.”

Warranting leading to an illogical
conclusion
“People in English-speaking countries tend not
to know another language. This indicates that
they are poor language learners”
“does this reasoning add up? Aren’t there more
plausible conclusions”
“This may suggest that English speakers do not
see the need to know other languages.”

Conclusion not explicitly linked to
warranting (missing steps)
“Statistics show that students are drinking far to
much to be good for their health. Alcoholic drinks
should be increased in price.”
“What causal relationship between the factors are
you meaning to suggest?”
“Since students have only limited money, raising the
price of alcohol might result in their drinking less.”

Conclusion with inadequate
warranting
“Trainee managers learn more effectively when they are
praised than when their efforts are criticized. In a survey
of female trainee managers in a retail company, 77% said
they liked to be praised.”
“Is the evidence adequate to justify the extent of the
claim? Is the evidence appropriately interpreted?”
“However, males and females may respond differently to
praise. Furthermore, there is no evidence of a link
between ‘liking to be praised’ and learning more
effectively.”

Logical fallacies
Flaws in reasoning that lead to illogical
statements.
Masquerade as reasonable statements.
Attempts to manipulate readers by appealing
to their emotions instead of their intellect.

Hasty Generalization
Conclusions from inadequate evidence
E.g. “My hometown is the best place to live” with
two examples to support the statement.
That’s not enough evidence!
Others might not feel the same way.
Other examples are stereotyping and sexism.
False analogy
Differences outweigh the similarities or the
similarities are irrelevant.
E.g. ““Old Joe Smith would never make a good
president because an old dog can’t learn new
tricks”
Joe Smith isn’t a dog.
Learning the role of being a president is in no way
similar to that of being a president.
These analogies sound clever but fall apart under
examination.

Begging the question
Aka Circular reasoning
Tries to offer proof simply by stating another
version of the argument.
E.g. “Wrestling is a dangerous sport because it is
unsafe” or “Wrestling is a dangerous sport
because wrestlers get injured.”
dangerous unsafe
Irrelevant argument
An irrelevant argument reaches a conclusion
that
doesn’t follow from the premises.
E.g. “Jane Jones is a forceful speaker, so she’ll
make a good mayor.”
Why? What exactly does speaking ability have to
do with being a good mayor?

False cause
A false cause assumes that because two
events are related in time, the first caused the
second.
E.g. ‘The new weather satellite caused the rain
storms’
How do you know that?
Superstition.
Self-contradiction
Two premises that can’t both be true at the
same time.
E.g. “Only when nuclear weapons have finally
destroyed us will we be convinced of the need to
control them”
Not possible for both to happen
Contradiction
Red herring
Tries to distract attention from one issue by
introducing a second that’s unrelated to the
first.
E.g. “Why worry about pandas becoming extinct
when we haven’t solved the plight of the
homeless?”
What does the second have to do with the first
Argument to the person
Attacking the person making the argument
rather than the argument itself.
E.g. “We’d take her position on employment
issues seriously if she were not so lazy.”

Guilt by association
A person’s arguments, ideas, or opinions lack
merit because of that person’s activities,
interests, or companions.
E.g. “Jack belongs to the International Hill
Climbers Association, which declared bankruptcy
last month. This makes him unfit to be mayor of
our city.”

Jumping on the bandwagon
Something is right or permissible because
“everyone does it.”
E.g. “How could bungee jumping be unhealthy if
thousands of people have done it?”

False or irrelevant authority
Citing the opinion of someone who has no
expertise in the subject at hand.
Transfer prestige from one area to another
E.g. “Lionel Messi eats Bimbo bread”
Card-stacking
Ignores evidence on the other side of a
question.
Aka Cherry Picking or Special pleading.
E.g. “the three studies we looked at all had
positive results”
How did you choose these tests? What about any
other tests?

The either-or fallacy
Offers only two alternatives when more exist
E.g. “Either go to college or forget about getting a
job.”
Rigid two-sided statement that ignores the truth.
Taking something out of context
Deliberately distorts an idea or a fact by
removing it from its previously surrounding
material.
e.g Die Hard 4.0
Blurb New York Daily News “Hysterically …
entertaining.”
written line: “The action in this fast-paced,
hysterically overproduced and surprisingly
entertaining film is as realistic as a Road Runner
cartoon.”

Appeal to ignorance
Make an incorrect argument based on
something never having been shown to be
false or true.
Often exist in the fuzzy language of doublenegatives.
Absence of evidence isn’t evidence of absence
‘I haven’t seen it so it mustn’t be there’
Ambiguity and equivocation
Statements open to more than one
interpretation, thus concealing the truth.
E.g. “The software lived up to the users
expectations”
Ambiguous. We don’t know if this is good or bad.

Five Critical Synopsis Questions
A. Why am I reading this?
B. What are the authors trying to do in writing
this?
C. What are the authors saying that is relevant to
what I want to find out?
D. How convincing is what the authors are saying?
E. In conclusion, what use can I make of this?

A: Why am I reading this?
To stay focused
For example;
Background
Methodology
Contrasting approach
etc.
B: What are the authors trying to do in
writing this?
For example;
Report the findings of their own research.
Review others’ work.
Develop theory.
Express particular values or opinions.
Criticize what is currently done.
Advise on what should be done in the future.
Also, who is it written for
C: What are the authors saying that is
relevant to what I want to find out?
What the text is actually about – what it
reports, how any empirical work was carried
out, what was discovered and what the
authors conclude about it.
Where any overlap lies between the authors’
concerns and your own interests – the authors
are unlikely to have been asking the same
questions as you are.

D: How convincing is what the authors
are saying?
Quality of data and argument.
Strength of warranting for claims
False arguments
Underlying assumptions
E: In conclusion, what use can I make
of this?
How important is the article?
Mention briefly
Discuss in detail
Do I agree with the claims made?
How well does if answer my review question?
A Critical Synopsis of a text
A. Why am I reading this?
B. What are the authors trying to do in writing
this?
C. What are the authors saying that is relevant to
what I want to find out?
D. How convincing is what the authors are saying?
E. In conclusion, what use can I make of this?
Code (1) = Return to this for detailed analysis; (2) = An
important general text; (3) = Of minor importance; (4) =
Not relevant.

Tutorial Exercise
Choose a text in your area of expertise and write
a critical synopsis of the text for the purposes of
one of your own review questions.
A. Why am I reading this?
Part of reading to answer the review question
‘….

The Review Process

External Review (revision)
Part of the Scientific Method
Evaluation by experts.
Peer review
Unbiased anonymous criticism.
Scientific journals, conferences.
Better journal or conference ->
work perceived as being of a higher standard or
better quality.

Peer Review
Quality control to check if a work should be
funded or published
Peer
= people of equal standing
= other experts in my field
= other computer scientists
Not all journals or conferences have peerreview. Just the ones that matter.

Why publish
Support future research
Personal reasons
Announce formally the results
of work
Associate your name with an
important discovery, thereby
creating a permanent record
Promote your research
interests and attract additional
funds.
Publish or perish.

Numbers
International Journal of Service Industry Management
(Emerald)

Step 1: Journal Editors
Paper is relevant
Paper matches editorial platform, e.g.
Relevant
Innovative
Groundbreaking
Only a few papers survive until peer review
Step 2: Reviewers
Comment on the validity of the science,
identifying scientific errors and evaluating the
design and methodology used
Judge the significance by evaluating the
importance of the findings
Determine the originality of the work based on
how much it advances the field. Reviewers also
identify missing or inaccurate references.
Recommend that the paper be published or
rejected. Editors don’t have to heed this
recommendation, but most do.

Process
Single-blind review
Reviewers know the author’s identity, but not vice
versa
Double-blind review
Identities of the author and referees are both
hidden
Open peer review
Author’s and reviewers’ identities are known to
each other

Exercise
What are the relative advantages of each type
of peer review.
Single-blind review
Double-blind review
Open peer review
Advantages
Single-blind review
Reviewers can be honesty without fear of
retribution
Double-blind review
Reviewers aren’t influenced by authors’ identity
and the work needs to speak or itself
Open peer review
Reviewers are more accountable and forced to be
more thoughtful

Single-blind vs Double blind
True double-blind review is difficult since the
identity of an established author is often easy
to guess.

Advantages of Peer Review
For Authors
Validates work, respectability, prospect of future
funding.
Editors
Informs decision making, improves journal reputation
(when it works).
Scientists
Helps us prioritize what we read and judge the quality
of published research.
Non-scientists
Helps us make sense of scientific claims.
Limitations of Peer Review
Doesn’t necessarily find errors.
Reviewers can concentrate on style rather than
content.
Can’t detect fraud (i.e. falsified results)
Referees don’t have access to actual data
Better at detecting plagiarism than fraud
Abuse of inside information by reviewers
Limitations of Peer Review
Slows down advances in knowledge
Publication of an article can take over a year.
Suppression of Valuable Results
Reviewer might suppress innovative results that
challenge his own standpoint.
Research undertaken in developing nations is
often overlooked in top-end journals.
Language issues.
PC era peer-review
Peer review software
Streamlined process
Blogs? Open-data? Post-publication review?
Conclusion
Know how to read and think critically
Recognize and evaluate an argument
Write a critical review
Understand the peer-review process
Resources
Critical Reading and Writing for Postgraduates
Mike Wallace and Alison Wray
SAGE Study Skills
TED talks, www.ted.com/talks
Naomi Oreskes
Research Proposal Abstract
The objective of this exercise is for you to prepare a short (one page or
half page) abstract for a project proposal with an original research
question and some outline plan for answering that research question.
You are welcome to choose your own project ideas as long as they fit
the project specifications. These can be related to things such as:
The evaluation of an aspect of your current research or software
that you have developed in another part of the course,
a hobby or side project that you are interested in, or
a replication of an existing study, where you extend or vary some
aspect of it in an interesting way.

Research Proposal Abstract
To keep the work relevant to the CSSE masters course, the
problem must be grounded in computer science or
software-engineering.
In practice, the best problem statements are ones that
identify a small but interesting problem.
There should be some value to solving the problem
(Justification).
It should be reasonable to expect that you can undertake
all the required work within the time frame of the module.
You should be careful to avoid overly-ambitious problems
or anything that might end up taking too much time.

The problem could be related to either one of the
following:
The work you plan to do for your Masters
dissertation,
a replication of a published study,
an on-going research project (or related sideproject) in your research lab
something suggested by the course leader or
another faculty member.

Due to the time-constraints of the project I would
advise against the development of new software
from scratch
Use software that already exists
Software that can be implemented quickly using a
software toolkit.
Use code from other sources (give proper credit
to the original authors).
Lo-fi prototyping is another feasible option.
So are surveys or questionnaires
Examples of projects that could work well are:
An empirical comparison of different information visualizations for
hierarchy navigation
– using the perfuse infovis toolkit to implement different visualizations of a
familiar network drive hierarchy
An investigation into the problems with mobile maps
– this could be an exploratory study to investigate sources of frustration for
mobile map users
An Evaluation of Quantile Distortion Plots for the Effective Visualization
of Bivariate Correlation Patterns
– comparing quantile curve distorted plots with unscaled plots using data
describing various economic and social indicators for countries around the
world
A user centered redesign of the Suzhou bus map
– investigating how a user centered design methodology can be employed
to improve the user experience for a public-transport map of the city

You should have your first abstract proposal
finished at least by 25th October 2019.
If you finish the abstract earlier I can give you
early feedback that allows you to improve
your proposal.
You should not start your main project
proposal before your abstract is approved by
the module leader.

You are encouraged to approach academic staff
in the department to help develop your
proposal idea. The aim of this exercise is to
develop your idea of what a suitable research
project might be. You will have some feedback
from the module leader who can highlight any
potential problems with your proposal.

2015 Projects
AI Bear
Deed learning for Object
Recognition
Mental health app
Effect of SNS on student
performance
IR for library collection
Evaluation of Optimization
Strategies for Hadoop
Mobile browsing survey
Security watch
Word Cloud
Mobile Language game (with
sound)
Web English Learning Game
Security Problems in ecommerce
Bitcoin survey
IV for running watches
A Survey of Wireless Sensor
Networks
Car pooling app
Word segment analysis
Quantum communication
Smart Car Control
Evaluation of Decision Tree
Algorithms

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