Skip to Main Content

SKW 102 for TRiO Students

This guide is an introduction to resources relevant to SKW 102. The content is specifically focused on students in the TRiO program.

How will you put your sources to use?

Before you can decide if a source is right for you, it's important to think about how you'll be using that source in your research, writing, and speaking. Any type of source could be appropriate for a research assignment, depending on how you use it. The BEAM framework helps you think this through. BEAM stands for: Background, Exhibit, Argument, Method. 

BEAM

Background Sources provide information that is accepted as unquestionable fact

  • These sources are usually non-controversial
  • Depending on the discipline, background sources are considered "common knowledge," which is information that is universally accepted by those in a particular field of study

Exhibit Sources include the actual data/phenomena/artifacts a writer is interpreting or analyzing

  • These sources are used to provide an example of or give evidence for a claim
  • For a literature paper this would include the novel or essay you're analyzing, for history it would be a primary historical document, for sociology it might include a data set or experimental results, or for biology it may be information gathered from observing plants in a laboratory.

Argument Sources include information from other authors you are agreeing with, disagreeing with, or building upon

  • Other scholars have investigated your research question; acknowledging and citing them puts your research in conversation with these authors
  • This is your chance to add something new to the discourse on this topic

Method Sources are materials that influence how you think about, engage with, and understand your topic 

  • These sources can include research procedures, theories, and sources of discipline-specific vocabulary
  • They may also include specific theories or scholars whose work is relevant to your analysis