Friday, March 4, 2016

How to Read Academic Articles

How to Read Academic Articles


Have you ever tried to read an academic text? If you are in college, you have probably read some articles that seem to be written in a different language. This guide will help you read academic texts by teaching you about the moves academic writers make. It will also help you think about your own academic projects.

Academic texts have their own language, and because the audience is a group of experts, the writer fits her writing style to the audience’s needs. Remember reading Dr. Seuss as a kid? He used rhyming to reach a wide audience of kids and their parents. Dr. Seuss used entertaining stories to teach kids important lessons.  

When the target audience is very broad, the writer needs to make the writing simple and understandable. Dr. Seuss wanted to reach lots of kids and parents. A rhyming sing-song approach fits perfectly with Dr. Seuss’ target audience. The newspaper is written for an eighth grade reading level because news companies want to make information accessible to a lot of people. An advertisement will use simple words and common language to reach a really wide audience of customers. Academic articles are different because researchers have different purposes, and they write for different audiences.

Academic articles target specialized audiences.  For example, a medical doctor who writes for a journal of medicine is writing to other doctors. The writers who publish in medical journals need to use big words and complex sentences because the content is complicated. Doctors who read medical journal articles expect the writer to help advance the field of medicine. People not familiar with the medical community will have a hard time reading medical journal articles. This example illustrates two important points:
·        
                * Communities of practice shape communication
·                            *  Learning to read and write academic articles is challenging for newcomers

Academic texts are not designed to be accessible. When you first start reading academic articles, you will have to take it slow. The vocabulary will be hard. The structure of the article will be new. It feels like you showed up late for a very heated conversation. It is uncomfortable. And your first reaction might be to run for the exit. Getting past this initial reaction to run is the first step to success.

Stay positive as you learn how to read into academic conversations. You are learning how to read a new language- a language experts use to talk to other experts. At first it will be confusing and challenging. But think back to when you first learned to ride a bike. Did you sometimes fall off? Of course you did. I fell a lot, but I learned because I kept getting back up.

You are going to college to become an expert in some field. In order to become an expert, you have to learn how other experts communicate. Becoming an expert in one day or even a year is a tall order, but if you are passionate about your subject, you can become an expert who does amazing work.
Below you will find an outline to help you read academic articles. I break the structure down into four parts:
1.       Introduction
2.       Locating a Gap or Niche
3.       Methodology
4.       Results / Discussion

Introduction


Academic writers begin with an introduction to the area of study. The writer will show what other writers and scholars have done before. Expect to see citations, paraphrases, and quotes, as writers set up a context for a conversation.

I want you to think of the introduction as the beginning of the conversation. The writer is showing what other researchers have reported about a topic. Showing what other experts and scholars have already done helps to set up the rest of the article.

Isaac Newton said, “If I have seen a little further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants.” In order for Newton to raise questions and test theories, he needed to examine how others had studied similar theories and questions. Einstein came along in the 1900’s and built on Newton’s theories.

Today, scientists are still using Einstein’s theories to help build new ideas and theories. Some wonderful scientists from this century have shown some of Einstein’s theories to be incorrect. Other researchers have built on Einstein’s other theories and extended them even further.

Think of academic research as a building process. The writer starts off by showing what others have done.

Think of the introduction as the writer’s way of showing how others have explored a problem or issue. For example, an article designed to explore how students overcome writer’s block will look at how other scholars have studied writer’s block. This makes a lot of sense. Products are developed this way too. If my company wants to build the fastest and most comfortable private jet, it would start by looking at other successful designs to find ways to make improvements.

Here are some tips and tricks to help you get through the introduction:
·                         *   Relate what you are reading to your own experience. Sometimes ideas are really                                   abstract.Making a connection to something from your own life can help.
·                         Be a tortoise. Slow down. Remember, you are reading a conversation by experts for other                    experts. The people in the conversation have been doing this for a while.
·                         Make notes in the margin. Just because you are not an expert, doesn’t mean you are not able to            raise questions. Use your notes to help guide your interpretation of the conversation.
·                         Put complex ideas into simpler terms. It may help to write brief summaries to help distill                    complicated ideas into something more digestible.

Locating a Gap or Niche


Academic writers are expected to do more than summarize the work of others. If you think about it, the introduction is actually a summary of the related work that others have done before. If I am trying to help autistic children eat healthier, before I write my own article, I need to read the articles that others have written. As a researcher, I need to learn about how others have approached similar problems to the ones I am looking at.

Summarizing what others have done is never enough. Imagine that you are sitting around a giant table with ten other people. Everyone is discussing a complicated problem and each person has a perspective to offer. If you want to get into the conversation, you have to find a gap or a place to bring something new to the conversation.

The writer will show something is missing from the conversation near the end of the intro. The beginning and middle of the intro show what others have done and said. So what is the writer herself going to do? A writer can’t just summarize what others have done without making some kind of contribution.

Let’s look at an example.

A researcher is studying factors that contribute to women reporting rape to police. In the intro, the researcher shows a lot of studies that explain why women don’t report.  Here’s the gap: while many have studied why women don’t report rape to police, few studies explore why women do report. After showing what other scholars have done and explored, the writer is showing how she is going to enter the conversation.

Sometimes the gap involves continuing a tradition. For example, let’s say a researcher is studying political speeches. The researcher notices that many other scholars have found strong emotional appeals at the end of speeches. The researcher decides to examine some recent political speeches. Continuing a tradition involves extending a line of research by showing even more evidence for the current trend. Since this researcher found similar results as others, she is continuing a tradition that those scholars started.

As you read academic articles, keep an eye out for this move. The writer will show that something is missing from the conversation, and then she will do something to enter the discussion.

Methods


Next is the methods section. The methods section explains who, what, where, when, and why. Here are some common research methods:
·                              Experiment: researcher tests variables and hypotheses.
·                              Textual analysis: researcher examines texts (texts can mean different mediums, such as                       films, television programs, brochures, and so forth).
·                              Interviews
·                              Focus groups
·                              Surveys

Paul Piff conducted an experiment to see if money makes people mean. He organized the experiment using a cross walk, a fake pedestrian, and a video camera. Cars are supposed to stop for a pedestrian at a cross walk. The video recorded each cross attempt and counted which types of cars stopped and which didn’t. Piff divided the cars into separate categories according to how expensive the cars were and whether they broke the law.  

After two days of experimenting, Piff reviewed the videos and charted which cars stopped and which ones broke the law. Later on in the paper, Piff reveals the findings and uses the data to make some claims about which types of cars stopped for the pedestrian. Paul Piff is trying to see if there is a relationship between the expensiveness of a car and whether or not the driver breaks the law.

Let’s look at another example. Criminal Justice researchers are interested in finding ways to reduce crime in high crime areas. In the 1990’s Community Based Policing was started to reduce crime rates in high crime areas.  Participating police are trained in community relations and are taught how to interact with the community. The goal is to build positive relationships between police and people living in troubled neighborhoods. 

A researcher wants to understand what factors make community based policing successful. She reads a lot of academic articles about community based policing. She notices that many researchers have studied the effects of community based policing, but few study why programs are effective. She travels to police stations and interviews officers who started community policing programs. She asks questions like:
·                             What made your program successful?
·                            What shortcomings did you face?
·                            How did you train officers to get the program started?

By interviewing many officers across many departments, the researcher hopes to learn more about why community based policing programs are successful. This researcher read lots of other articles, noticed a gap, and has decided to do interviews to learn more.

Here is one more example. Researchers who study Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) have found lots of evidence that children with Autism are malnourished. Autistic kids are often picky eaters because of sensitivity to taste and texture. Other factors like color can also limit the variety of foods autistic kids will eat. Researchers want to learn how to help autistic kids eat a healthier diet.

Think of the paragraph above as the introduction and literature review. The researcher has showed the problem, and next comes the method to try to solve the problem. An experiment is in order. This researcher decides to see if gradually introducing new foods in small amounts might help autistic kids eat a better variety of foods. The study lasts ten weeks and involves one autistic child. Each week, a new food is put onto the plate with other foods that the child likes. Eventually, the researcher replaces common foods the child eats with new foods. 

The methods section shows how the researcher conducted her study.

So far, we have looked at the intro, which shows what other researchers have done. We looked at the gap, where researchers show what is missing from the conversation. Finally, we looked at the methods, which is how the researcher studies the issue. After conducting a study, the next step is reporting the results.

Results/Discussion


After the methods section comes a combined section called the results and discussion sections. These sections are sometimes separate but can also be delivered as one section. You can think of the results as what the researcher found out. Think of the discussion as why it matters.
The results section reports the findings from the study and explains what was learned. Results will often synthesize findings from the current study with perspectives emerging from the other scholars who are part of the conversation. The results section is designed to build an understanding of the findings, complicate the conversation by bringing in a new but related perspective, or perhaps refute and shed doubt on previous scholarship. The evidence from the study will shape how the results and discussion sections unfold.  
Remember the example of the study looking at whether or not cars stop for pedestrians? Would you be surprised to learn that as the expensiveness of the car increased, the likelihood of breaking the law increased too? Nearly half of the cars in the most expensive car category broke the law. None of the cars in the least expensive category broke the law.
Does this study prove that people who drive expensive cars are mean? Not necessarily. The discussion section will also report on some shortcomings for the study. It is hard to know why cars don’t stop. Filming for only two days means that the sample size is relatively small. Perhaps two weeks of data could reveal different results.
Many researchers will call for further research in the results section. The scholar studying eating habits for autistic kids found that gradually introducing new foods on the plate with preferred foods worked. By the end of the study, the autistic child was eating plates of only new foods without any of her preferred foods. This research demonstrates that with positive reinforcement and a gradual approach, an autistic picky eater will eat new foods. There is also a need for studies that engage a larger sample size. Only studying one child is pretty limiting.


Will Reading and Writing Academic Articles get Easier?


All academic texts are designed to solve problems. Some researchers are looking for better approaches to help kids with specific learning disabilities. Others are trying to understand how to help doctors relate to patients across different cultures.  All research articles are centered on finding solutions to challenging problems.

As you expose yourself to academic texts in the discipline you are studying, you will grow in confidence. If you want to become a great swimmer, you have to spend lots of time in the pool.  Find a pool that fits your self-interest, one that matters to you, and the work of becoming an expert will be worth it.



References

Barahoma, C., Dubard, M., Luiselli, K., & Kesterson, J. (2013).  School-based feeding intervention to

increase variety and quantity of foods consumed by an adolescent with autism.

Patterson, D., & Campbell, R. (2010). Why rape survivors participate in the criminal justice system.
Journal of Community Psychology, Vol. 38, No. 2, 191-205.

Piff, P. (2013). Does money make you mean. TED talk, October.