Stage
1: Task Initiation The
scientist recognizes the need for information in some area. This
need could arise from his or her own curiosity, from an outside request,
or from any number of other sources. For
example, a chemist working for an energy company might recognize the
need for a non-petroleum automobile fuel to replace gasoline.
Stage
2: Topic Selection The scientist chooses a general area
to investigate. For example, the
chemist interested in gasoline alternatives might decide to explore
fuels made from plant materials.
Stage
3: Topic Exploration The
scientist explores what is already known
about his or her chosen topic. This stage is also called a
"review of the literature." For
example, our chemist might use the books and online databases of her
company's library or a university library to find scientific
publications about alternative fuels. She might investigate the
chemical reactions of combustion (oxidation), the required chemical &
physical properties of automobile fuels, the process of turning plant
materials into liquid fuel (refinement), and the problems others have
encountered with plant-based fuels.
Stage
4: Focus Formulation The scientist
chooses a specific area
to investigate further. He or she will narrow the topic to a specific
situation to be examined, and will state this as
a hypothesis to be tested. For
example, our chemist might find in her review of the literature that a
plant-based fuel developed in the 1970s was abandoned because it did
not burn properly in the cars of that era. She might decide to
"replicate," or repeat, an experiment that was performed back then,
but this time using a computer-controlled engine like those found in
modern cars. Her hypothesis might be, "If
the test fuel is used to power an automobile engine with computerized
fuel and ignition controls, the engine's combustion efficiency will be
higher than when powered with gasoline."
Stage
5: Information Collection The scientist conducts an experiment
to test the hypothesis. For example, our
chemist might design a test with two identical engines, one burning
gasoline and the other burning the test fuel. She might measure the
combustion efficiency of the two engines by tracking how much fuel
they consume compared to their power output and sampling the exhaust
gases they produce for signs of incomplete combustion.
Stage
6: Presentation of Findings The scientist
interprets the data
collected in the experiment and documents the results. For example, our
chemist might find that the the fuel she is testing performs the same
as (but not better than) gasoline. (Notice that although her
hypothesis is wrong, her results are still important.) She might
document her findings in an internal company report or publish them in
a scientific journal article.
Kuhlthau, C. C. (2004). Seeking meaning: a process approach to library and
information services (2nd ed.). Westport, CT: Libraries Unlimited.
Kuhlthau, C. C. (n.d.). Information Search Process:
A Search for Meaning Rather Than Answers. Retrieved July 15, 2005, from
the Rutgers University, Department of Library and Information Science Web site:
http://www.scils.rutgers.edu/~kuhlthau/Search%20Process.htm
Woods, M. (2005). "Science." In The New Book of Knowledge: Scholastic Library
Publishing. Retrieved July 13, 2005 from the Grolier Online database.