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The aim of the third edition of "The Craft of Research" is the same as the first two: to meet the needs of all researchers, not just first-year undergraduates and advanced graduate students, but even those in business and government who do and report research on any topic, academic, political, or commercial. We wrote it to
• guide you through the complexities of turning a topic or question into a research problem whose significance matches the effort that you put into solving it
• help you organize and draft a report that justifies the effort
• show you how to read your report as your readers will so that you can revise it into one that they will read with the understanding and respect it deserves
Other handbooks touch on these matters, but this one, we think, is different. Most current guides acknowledge that researchers rarely move in a straight line from finding a topic to stating a thesis to filling in note cards to drafting and revision. Experienced researchers loop back and forth, move forward a step or two before going back in order to move ahead again, change directions, all the while anticipating stages not yet begun. But so far as we know, no other guide tries to explain how each part of the process influences all the others¤Ñhow asking questions about a topic prepares the researcher for drafting, how drafting can reveal problems in an argument, how writing an introduction can send you back to a search for more sources.
 
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