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Evidence Cards and Research Lecture Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon
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Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Evidence Cards and Research Lecture

Revised by Mark VeederOriginally By Andres Gannon

Page 2: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Section 1 – Importance of Research

I cut my first card!!

Page 3: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Good DebatersCan persuasively convince the judge their

argument is better than their opponents argumentDeliveryContent

Researching is about producing the best possible content you can for a debate

Page 4: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Why Research?Research wins debatesResearch is fun!Research gets creative

Just one more card mom, promise!

Page 5: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Section 2 – How to Research

Page 6: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

What to ResearchResearch should produce arguments that you

can read in a debateWhat form do these argument take?How do I organize arguments?What am I looking for?How do I get from a google search to a

completed file?

Page 7: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Basic Research TipsNo scientific formula for how to researchStart with broad searches to investigate

where the literature is going

Page 8: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Intermediate Research Tips“Digital Privacy”Picking the Right

LanguageFollowing the LitFootnotes!

Page 9: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Ultra-Advanced Research Tip

Page 10: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

How Not to Research“Digial Privacy”

and “nuclear war”Ignoring opposing

evidenceMillion cards, one

argumentDebate search

terms (key, solves, etc)

Truth½ a file

Maybe this aff doesn’t cause nuclear war…

Page 11: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Section 3 – Marks Super Secret Guide to the Internets

Page 12: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Internets ShortcutsNew tab – Ctrl+TNew window – Ctrl+NOpen in new window - Middle

click/Ctrl+ClickMove to next window - Ctrl+TabMove to last window - Ctrl+Shift+TabClose tab - Ctrl+WSelect URL - F6 (Command-L)

Page 13: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Google TricksExact phrase search - “X and Y”Exclude a word - -querySynonyms - ~queryWebsite restriction – site:google.comWildcard – “a * saved is a * earned”Around – query AROUND (4) queryFiletype – filetype:pdf

Page 14: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Processing fast handsCopy - Ctrl-C (Command-C)Paste - Ctrl-V (Command-V)Cut - Ctrl-X (Command-X)Undo - Ctrl-Z (Command-Z)Redo - Ctrl-Y (Command-Y)Select all - Ctrl-A (Command-A)Switch windows – Alt+Tab (4-finger

swipe/F3)Select paragraph - Ctrl+Shift+Arrow

Up/DownSelect word - Ctrl+Shift+Arrow Left/Right

Page 15: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

SourcesNews and Time

SensitiveGoogle DatelexisEbscoHostFactiva

Philosophy BasedProject MuseReligion and

Philosophy Collection

Qualified/InternationalGoogle ScholarSagePubProjectMuseIngentaConnect

Page 16: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Section 4 - Processing

Page 17: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

What is processing?The final product of researchWhat you aim to arrive at when you take

articles from the internet and convert them into evidence cards

Page 18: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Things to Have When ProcessingTagCiteCard

Page 19: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

What is a Tag?Short summary of the argument your card

makesWhy have a tag?

Convey your argumentFlowability

What should be included in a tag?Claim – argument the card makesWarrant – why that argument is true

Page 20: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Good tag, bad tag!1. Solves oil dependence2. The aff is the apotheosis of the capitalist

death machine which threatens to be, for the first time in the age of humanity, that which brings upon us our imminent doom in the fiery splash of the decadence of greed and filth

3. Warming is real and anthropogenic – models and scientific consensus are on our side

Page 21: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

What is a Cite?Why have a cite?What to include in a cite?

Author nameAuthor qualificationsDate publishedArticle nameSource (Newspaper, Journal name, etc)URL/Database found

Page 22: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Good cite!Brin, David. Doctor of Philosophy in space science, 2010 fellow at the Institute of Ethics. 1998. The Transparent Society. “Chapter One: The Challenge of an Open Society” http://www.davidbrin.com/transparentsociety1.html

Page 23: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

What is a card?What to do:

Don’t skip paragraphsDon’t cut off paragraphsDon’t change textUnderline well!You don’t have to include the entire article

Page 24: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Steps to cutting cards1) Open the debate template, Verbatim2) Paste the article into Verbatim (F2)3) Underline the article (F9 and F10)4) Make the article pretty (F3 and Ctrl+8)5) Write a tag (F7)6) Write a cite (F8 for the author name and

date)7) Highlight the card (F11)

Page 25: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Section 5 - Template

Page 26: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Verbatimpaperlessdebate.com

RequirementsPC – Office 2010Mac – Office 2011

Page 27: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Word Ribbon

Page 28: Revised by Mark Veeder Originally By Andres Gannon.

Google TricksExact phrase search - “X and Y”Exclude a word - -querySynonyms - ~queryWebsite restriction – site:google.comWildcard – “a * saved is a * earned”Around – query AROUND (4) queryFiletype – filetype:pdf