The Library Peer Navigators offer drop-in hours for basic research and citation help--no appointment needed!
Spring 2025 Drop-in Hours in Library 115:
Monday: 11am-1pm and 3:30pm-4:30pm
Tuesday: 10am-12pm and 3pm-5pm
Wednesday: 11am-1:30pm and 3:30pm-4:30pm
Thursday: 10am-11am and 3pm-5pm
See also: Sunday Study Time
BEAM is an acronym intended to help you think about the various ways you might use sources when writing a researched argument. Joseph Bizup, an English professor at Boston University, outlined the framework in a 2008 article. The idea has since been refined and adapted by many others.
Different academic disciplines will value different aspects of sources and how one uses them.
The discipline of history privileges the two vowels in the BEAM framework:
EXHIBIT: Historians analyze and interpret primary sources.
ARGUMENT: Historians join a scholarly conversation by placing their analysis and interpretation in dialog with the work of other historians. Historians publish their work in the form of scholarly articles and monographs (scholarly books).
The discipline of anthropology emphasizes methods/theory:
EXHIBIT: Anthropologists undertake field observations of a group.
ARGUMENT: Anthropologists join a scholarly conversation by placing their analysis and interpretation in dialog with the work of other social scientists. They publish their work in the form of scholarly articles and ethnographic studies (scholarly books).
METHOD: Anthropologists apply competing social theories to their data to test the validity of said theories.
Tertiary sources, such as subject encyclopedias and textbooks, are excellent starting points in your research. Use them to find:
Large digital collections of subject encyclopedias can be accessed via several publisher-based platforms: