Supplementary Material

Whether or not your instructor requires you to read material in addition to the textbook, you will learn more about a topic if you go to some of the primary and supplementary sources that are referenced in each chapter of your text. These sources can be journal articles, research papers, or original essays, and they can be found online or in your library. Reading the original source material will give you more detail than most textbooks do.

Many of these sources were originally written for other instructors or researchers, so they often refer to concepts that are familiar to other scholars, but not necessarily to first-year college students. If you are reading a journal article that describes a theory or research study, one technique for easier understanding is to read the article backwards—from the end to the beginning. Read the article’s conclusion and discussion sections first, and then go back to see how the author performed the experiment or formed the ideas. In almost all scholarly journals, articles are introduced by an abstract, which is a paragraph-length summary of the article’s methods and major findings. Reading the abstract is a quick way to get the main points of a research article before you start reading it. As you’re reading research articles, always ask yourself: So what? Was the research important to what we know about the topic, or, in your opinion, was it unnecessary?