literature[s] it belongs to and what the camps are within those literatures.If not,then you will need to answer more basic questions about literatures and campsfirst.Maybe on your first pass through a work, the main benefit of your readingwill be to help you identify a literature or camp.Subsequent readings may berequired to fully understand, in a more nuanced way, the position of the workwithin the literatures/camps that it initially helped you to identify.)In terms of assessing contribution, you might think in terms of the following questions:
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What are this work's empirical contributions?
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What are this work's methodological contributions?
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What are this work's theoretical contributions?
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What are this work's practical contributions?
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What can this work contribute to my own work?(In this regard, it is important todo "generous readings."It is easy to take a very narrow, literal view, to discardas irrelevant anything that does not directly address that in which you areinterested.In most cases, however, it is possible to take away something of value, whether it be something about your topic in particular, or a more generalinsight about research practice, methodology, theory, etc.)
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Graduate study -- and coursework in particular -- typically involves a high volumeof reading. How can we manage this reading load well, andwhat are somespecific ways to minimizefeeling overwhelmed? Put another way, how is itpossible to read deeply amid so much material?
The key is to have tools (both intellectual and technological) to help you.You can't justsplash around aimlessly.You have to read with purpose and direction.That meansthat for each and every piece that you read, you should try to answer the questionsoutlined above.At first, this will seem mechanical and might slow you down.Eventually, however, you will come to implicitly ask and answer these questions of everything you read; you won't really have to think about it anymore, you'll just do itinstinctively.These questions are valuable "intellectual tools."You can enhance theeffectiveness of these tools through the use of technological tools like citationmanagement applications, note-taking/writing applications, or database applications.Inparticular, a simple database with entries for each work you read, with fields for each of the questions above, not only provides "technological enforcement" encouraging you toanswer each of these questions every time, it also allows for more consistentcomparison between and among sources.
How might reading practices shift at different points in an academic career -- e.g.,coursework, comprehensive exams, thesis or dissertation, early faculty years,and so forth?
1.These questions come from Kim Fortun's exam preparation course in the Department of Science and Technology Studies at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.Those who have takenthe course with Kim and/or worked with her as a committee member (as I have), areindebted to her for taking issues of scholarly practice seriously, as well as requiring herstudents to do the same.2
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