Some Tools
By Kevin

Making them handy
I've been working a lot of research and as I was suggesting in an earlier entry, many resources are no longer free. The good thing then, is that National Library Board has a eResources site that provides free access to important journal and publications databases. You just have to register an account, which is free. And then you can use their search system that will aggregate search results from multiple databases.
Alternatively, you can use the NLB eResources site to go straight into a single journal database. My favourite is JSTOR where they hold old journal articles and research papers on a huge variety of subjects. I've successfully found famous economics papers there and looked through some of them. They are particularly useful for academic research and if you're keen to find out more about some papers Tim Harford read while writing his book, Logic of Life, you could search for them there too.
For Statistics, you would be glad to make use of Google's Public Data sets, a tool very much in its preliminary stage of development. For more sophisticated and complex data there's OECD Stats, but mainly focusing on OECD nations. There's Eurostats of course, and both World Bank and IMF provides extremely useful data to the public.
Evaluating Articles
By Martin See

Who did the writing?
You can hear the fashionable phrase research skills widely bandied about these days. The phrase amounts to doing your homework on a certain research topic, which includes finding out as much relevant information as possible by going through the existing literature, be it in paper or digital formats. It does not matter whether you are a student working on your project paper or an employee writing your report; you will constantly require these skills to excel in your work because every argument that you make or every suggestion that you raise ideally requires you to do research on them and to include current literature on those points. Note the use of the word skills in the previous sentences. Being skills, they can be learnt. This article will help you to improve an area of these skills, namely the ability to evaluate articles or sources in your work.
When you are evaluating your articles or sources, you may want to consider these key points:
a) Peer reviews
Most credible articles are peer reviewed by qualified experts in the relevant fields. It means that before the articles are published, they are subjected to intense scrutiny from their fellow colleagues, researchers, and other experts. An article published in Science, the academic journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, would obviously have gone through more processes of regulations and checks as compared to one published in ERPZ (a really unfortunate example). The more rigorous the peer reviews, the more credible the articles will be.
b) Authorship
Before you consider any ideas/arguments made in a paper, always do a thorough research on the author. Is the author a qualified expert in the field of study? An article on the physics of fluids by a well known economist is probably a dubious work. A general rule of thumb is to use the works of authors who are authorities in the relevant research fields. You may also want to consider if the authors have any personal agendas. You are less likely, for example, to believe in a glowing report on the financial stability of Yahoo! if it is prepared by an analyst with a heavy portfolio in Yahoo! shares as compared to an independent financial institution. Some research papers may also be heavily funded by some particular organisations and this may have significant bearing on the conclusions in the paper. Would you trust a health report on the effects of smoking if it was funded by Philip Morris? It is, therefore, important to consider the authors of the articles that you are using in your work.
c) Context
Every paper or every work is written and published in different contexts. If you want a contemporary view of World War I, you would probably not want to pick a book published in the 1920s, the post-era. So carefully consider the contexts of articles before you use them in your work.
d) Recency
When you use an article or source in your work, you would want the most recent idea/argument (assuming that the quality is the same in the comparison) except in special circumstances (e.g. history). This is especially relevant if the ideas/arguments are made obsolete rapidly, such as in the industry of information technology (IT). Unless the old articles offers an unique viewpoint, it would be better off for you to find recent articles to use for your work. As a general rule of thumb, stick to sources that are five years (or less) from your work. Imagine if a work is published in 2005, the research and the data involved in the work would most likely not be from 2005 but from 2003 or 2002. That is at least a gap of 7 years from your work (2010). A bigger gap would be more adverse and you would do well to avoid that in your work.
With all these considerations, I wish you all the best in your research! If you find that there are other considerations too, please share it with the ERPZ audience in the comments section.
Pay Gates
By Kevin

Blocked...
I've been working on a couple of writing assignments that requires intensive research and I discovered to my horror that more journals are erecting pay gates for their articles. I subscribe to The Economist and so I don't have to worry about theirs but Wall Street Journal gives me quite some trouble.
I'm therefore actively using articles from The New York Times, Business Week and Fortune Magazine as my main sources. The Straits Times website pay gate frustrates me in particular because I want to keep myself updated on local news through their site but they're not helpful with it and worst, when I ever need an article from them, it is usually copied from New York Times or other international publications and yet they're hidden behind the pay gate.
For those working on more news research sort of stuff, note the publications without pay gates!
Science Bits
By Kevin

Blasting out in 60, 59, 58...
It's Christmas today and I have no Christmas gifts for my readers besides a new discovery. Scientific American offers a great podcast series called '60-Seconds Science'. It offers bits of scientific discoveries from recent research within 60 seconds; the information is smaller than bite size and definitely don't require much chewing, which makes it perfect for anyone tuning in to look for an anecdote for a speech or introduction for an article.
'If Time flew, you had fun' is a pretty interesting one and the same can be said for Caffeine Merely Masks Alcohol's Effect. The narrator delivers their science bits in the most entertaining way for something so academic. For people who fancy social sciences and the less technical areas of science, the podcast is a wonderful window to the science mankind is engaging in today.
For other intelligent content delivered in 60 seconds, check out 60-second Psych and 60-second Earth. Who knows, you might just pick up some bits of interesting facts to start a conversation with a stranger.
Leadership Review
By Kevin
Leading the pack...
ERPZ explores quite a lot of stuff; from matters about studying smart to the huge issues surrounding economics and the environment. This are the efforts to cover what students need to learn about and know (true to our objective of 'Educating students about being students'), but we seem to have missed out something really important in today's world and that's "Leadership".
I started out reading a recent issue of Fortune Magazine, which featured an article on How to build great leaders, uncovering the different MNCs methods of identifying and grooming leaders for their organzation. A second article on leadership discusses the leadership during a crisis or recession. Talent on Tap, an article from The Economist talks about the increasing trend of getting temporary big bosses to sit in the autonomous firms and thus helping to tide the firm over a crisis or avert one.
Finally, an article from Knowledge @ SMU discusses the implication for leadership in individuals with different degree of self-monitoring. They suggested how high self-monitor individuals stand out as informal leaders although the low self-monitors are the ones who ends up in position of authority. I like to think that high self-monitors are suitable for ad-hoc leadership roles or to lead during special circumstances, perhaps why firms need temp bosses. In long run, during ordinary day to day management and leadership, the consistency of low self-monitors probably stand out and will become more important. If you're interested to find out whether you score high on the self-monitoring scale, you can check out this test.
Life By Numbers
By Kevin

Nike+iPod Set
In this Wired article about The Nike Experiment, the power of living by numbers is demonstrated by the tracking device, Nike+ that is designed to provide runners with information (actually only speed and distance) of their runs.
Thanks to the article, I also got to learn about the Hawthorne Effect, which suggest that studying subjects would cause them to improve their behaviours as a result of their awareness of being observed even if they are not told what they are being studied on. Intuitively, it kind of makes sense and at a personal level when you are able to track data about yourself and monitor the figures, you'll tend to behave 'properly' so to speak. That goes to show that more often than not, discipline can be improved through feedback. Of course, for one to act upon the feedback, one must also trust it and people normally have no feud against raw numbers. That is what makes Nike+ such a success.
Healthcare & Business
By Kevin
All the noises about American healthcare costs and the policies President Obama is coming up to try and ease the high cost problem is attracting me to read up on the topic. It turns out that there's lots of economics involved in the phenomenon of high (and often fast-rising) cost of healthcare in America. The Economist's Leader section article, 'This is going to hurt' provides an overview of the problems with healthcare in America and its more elaborate article 'Heading for the emergency room' gives statistics to demonstrate the incentive problems that forms the basis of high cost of healthcare.
The Economist provides good reads for those concerned with the macro picture of healthcare in America but comparisons made between America and other countries often makes it seem that the whole of America is consistently on the wrong track for the healthcare industry at least when considered at a policy level. The New Yorker, however, has an excellent article by Atul Gawande published earlier this month titled 'The Cost Conundrum'. It goes really in-depth into the issue via a rather intimate study of the healthcare industry in a particular city in Texas, McAllen. Frankly, this is not the first time I am impressed by the rigour of reporting essays in The New Yorker. I highly recommend reading their essays on an eclectic array of topics for those with spare time on their hands and a love for reading non-fiction material (the latter point applies to me though, rather unfortunately, not the formal).
Drinkers, beware!
By Kevin
A recent article on New York Times discussed the scientists and researchers' dilemma and identified problems regarding the accuracy of studies published on drinking alcohol in moderation and indeed any health benefits of drinking alcohol at all. Although the article is basically focused on health matters and such, I want to direct readers' attention to the different problems identified by the article about research and studies.
The main problem identified about the studies is the problem of correlation being assumed to imply causation; the fact that moderate drinkers experience lower death rates compared to those non-drinkers and heavy drinkers may not necessarily mean that drinking in moderation improves survival or enhance lifespan. The idea is that a third variable may be involved: moderate drinking reflect socio-economic status of the subjects and these people are probably the more well-off, educated ones who tend to enjoy better access to healthcare and drugs than the other 2 groups of people.
The other problem identified is the funding from alcohol industry influencing the results of the studies or at least causing an accentuation of the positive benefits of moderate drinking identified in these studies and a potential disregard for any negative impacts that were discovered. There's the question of the stakeholders involved in the studies; the same sort of problem applies studies on smoking and lung cancer which I suppose is heavily rigged by the tobacco industry.
Then there's the problem of media and the way the results of such published studies are propagated to people. The media may sometimes distort findings or direct readers to make certain alarming conclusions about things just for sensation and thus generate readership. Notice how newspaper articles often have their own conclusions more practical to our daily lives for scientific studies that they cite in their article just like The Economist article I wrote about a couple of days back? I suspect it sometimes mislead readers into ideas that scientists didn't intend to convey in their studies.
Some learning points for students of GP from this, is that we can try criticizing figures or statistics quoted by GP passages in our Application Question citing that certain studies may be funded by lobby groups. The point is that you must argue this convincingly using hints from the passage itself and at the same time, when writing essays, one can cite a statistic unfavourable to his stand but apply the same critique and thus repackage the point into a counter-argument. Such problems with research or studies can also be used as a third way out; id est, argue that the contradicting studies mean there might just be no definite answer to the problem/question but a huge variety of them.
Slack on the Other Side
By Kevin
As a Singaporean and a Chinese who grew up in a family that emphasize on education, I can't help but find the American kids wonderfully slack after reading the latest Lexington on The Economist.
If you want to escape the local education system or think it is in tatters, read the article and think again.
