"Journal
Club"
Spring 2012
The research assignment is intended to help you engage with scientific approaches to answering questions about our world (Student Learning Objective #3 for GE Area R) and to help you develop your information competencies as you explore the scholarly literature in science.
Specifically, this assignment requires you to find related articles in the scholarly (i.e., peer reviewed) scientific literature and the popular literature. You will compare the presentation of a scientific issue (this term, the state of the scientific evidence for anthropogenic climate change or "global warming") to a lay audience in the popular literature with a presentation on the same issue to a scientific audience in the scholarly scientific literature. Your job will be to provide an analysis of each of these presentations that focuses on the argumentative strategies. What sorts of evidence and reasoning do scientists use to persuade a lay audience? How does this differ from the sorts of evidence and reasoning they use to persuade other scientists? When scientists disagree about an issue, what are the sources of this disagreement, and how might it be resolved?
We will do this research using a "journal club" approach that scientists frequently use to keep up with developments in the literature. Each member of the "club" locates articles for the group to read and discuss together. This lets you consider a good sampling of the literature, but divides the labor of locating the sources — and of trying to work out what the heck the articles are saying!
The culmination of this project will be a bibliography with detailed annotation (something that could serve as a guide to readers trying to figure out what kind of literature is available on a particular topic) and a brief essay comparing the approaches of the popular and the scholarly scientific literatures to this topic.
You will be working in groups of four to six people. It is not important that you have a lot of prior knowledge about the topic. Also, note that the focus of your research must be thescientific finding or question, not a moral, political, or social question (about how certain results should be used, what course of action they might require, etc.).
PROCEDURE:
1. In the course nav-bar in Desire2Learn, at the far right, you'll find the "Groups" icon. Click on this icon and select "Journal Club groups". You'll see the list of available groups for this assignment, and you will be able to add yourself to a group (except for groups that already have 6 members and thus are "full").
2. Before you join a group, you may want to talk with your classmates to find out who you think would be a compatible group-mate for the project. You can use the "Journal Club clearinghouse" topic in the Discussion area to have these talks.
3. Once you've joined a group, you'll be able to discuss details of your project in a "private" discussion thread in the Discussion area. Only members of your group (and your instructor) will be able to read what's posted in this thread.
NOTE: If you and your group prefer, you may meet and work together in real life (as opposed to online) or using other online methods (like a Yahoo group or a Google group), or you may use these in addition to meeting in D2L. However, I am unable to access your interaction with your group except via D2L -- which may leave you vulnerable in situations where one or more members of your group do less than their fair share of the work.
You need to locate a Journal Club group and check in with it by February 27, 2012.
When your group is assembled, you can go on to Phase II.
You may want to check out the library's InfoPower Tutorial to help you gear up for your literature search!
For each
person in the group, you need to locate one popular source and one scholarly
scientific source on the scientific finding or question (this term, the state
of the scientific evidence for anthropogenic climate change or "global
warming"). In other words, if there are 5 people in your group, you need
to end up with 5 popular sources and 5 scholarly scientific sources. However,
you want to try to come up with articles that are relevant (i.e., they take
up the finding or question directly) and useful (i.e., they convey information
fairly clearly) — so you won't want to automatically choose the first
articles you find. Instead, you'll want to do a literature search and "read
around" to see what's out there.
Each member of your group is responsible for locating 1 popular source and 1 scholarly source. In the case of duplicates, the group will work together to locate additional sources as needed. To the extent that there is any controversy among the scientists about the question, you will want to make sure that the scholarly scientific sources your group locates represent different sides of that controversy.
You are encouraged to work together to share search strategies, key words, etc.
The following research tips may help you:
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Each source needs to be accessible to the group. There are three main ways to share your source with the online group:
You need to locate your articles and post them to your Journal Club group by March 19, 2012.
When the group has located and posted or linked all the sources, you can go on to Phase III.
Phase III: Reading, evaluating, and analyzing sources.
Once your group has found its sources, the next task is to digest them. Especially for the scholarly scientific sources, this may be difficult! This is part of why you're working in a group — so you can help each other in making sense of challenging articles.
The best approach to tackling your set of sources is for each member of the group to make the initial post about one popular article from the set and one scholarly scientific article from the set. The initial post on a particular article will kick off the discussion of that article. Replies to that post can add additional details, ask questions, and make connections to other articles in the set.
Here are some suggestions to guide your discussion of the articles:
There are four kinds of commentary you should try to give on each article. In order of depth and difficulty, they are: Summary: a synopsis; answers the question "what are the big claims being made?" Description: observation of external or intrinsic properties; answers the question "how are these claims presented?" Evaluation: assessment of quality or effectiveness; answers the question "how successfully does the author make the case to support these claims?" Analysis: discussion and interpretation of underlying ideas; answers the question "what is the significance or larger meaning?" ("so what?") For our purposes, the larger significance we're looking for is the insight these sources give us into how scientific issues are presented to lay people and how scientists discuss the same issues with an audience of fellow scientists. The differences here may tell us something interesting about the different assumptions and expectations scientists and lay people have about science.
Don't freak out about the technical details in the scholarly scientific sources! Instead, focus on issues like:
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Your Journal Club group should begin working on Phase III by April 9, 2012 at the latest.
When your group has worked through an analysis of each of the sources, you can go on to Phase IV.
Phase IV: Organizing your findings.
After your group has discussed its sources, you should start organizing your findings. One piece of this task will be deciding how you would rank these articles if you were presenting this information to someone who wanted to understand this particular scientific finding or question. Which articles are most useful? Which are least useful? Does usefulness in this sampling of the literature have to do with the depth and breadth of facts presented, or with jargon that makes it difficult to figure out what the author has to say, or with some other feature? Work out a tentative ordering of the articles (from most useful to least useful).
Another organizational task you'll need to figure out is how to distill your discussion of the articles to a brief summary, decription, and evaluation of each.
Finally, you'll want to work out your analysis of this body of literature. What does it tell us about the different pictures of science that scientists and lay people, dealing with this same scientific issue, are working with?
Your Journal Club group should begin working on Phase IV by April 16, 2012 at the latest.
Your write-up will consist of two main components:
*An annotated bibliography of your sources.
*A brief (600 word) account of what your sources demonstrate about the differences in how scientific issues are presented to lay people and how scientists discuss the same issues with an audience of fellow scientists, as well as what these tell us about how the two groups view science. This is your group analysis of this sample of the literature.
To help you with your analysis, there will be a whole-class Journal Club discussion in class on Thursday, May 3, 2012. Each group will report some preliminary thoughts on the state of the scholarly and popular literature, then discuss these with members of other Journal Club groups.
What kind of annotation do I want? Each entry in your bibliography should include the following:
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Once your group has completed the annotated bibliography and group analysis, you can upload this write-up in the Dropbox in Desire2Learn.
Your group's final submission must be uploaded (or a hard copy turned in) by classtime Tuesday, May 15, 2012.
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