The Big 6 Skills
The Big 6 Skills
The Big 6 Skills
The Big6 is a process model of how people of all ages solve an information problem.
1. Task Definition
1.1 Define the information problem
1.2 Identify information needed (to solve the information problem)
o What is my current task?
o What are some topics or questions I need to answer?
o What information will I need?
4. Use of Information
4.1 Engage (e.g., read, hear, view, touch)
4.2 Extract relevant information
o What information do I expect to find in this source?
o What information from the source is useful?
5. Synthesis
5.1 Organize from multiple sources
5.2 Present the information
o How will I organize my information?
o How should I present my information?
6. Evaluation
6.1 Judge the product (effectiveness)
6.2 Judge the process (efficiency)
o Did I do what was required?
o Did I complete each of the Big6 Stages efficiently?
BIG 6™ RESEARCH WORKSHEET
Use this “form” to help you organize your project research. If you do your “thinking” first you will save
lots of time and frustration. The following steps support what is called “The Big 6” process and refers to
the six steps we all use to solve “information problems”. Your “problem” is usually the project you have
to research.
Take the time to develop your understanding of the process so your efforts are productive.
Step#1: TASK DEFINITION. Define your information problem & identify the information
needed to complete your task.
Key Question:
What is the project and what information do I need?
Strategy:
List questions to answer about your project.
(who, what, when, where, which, why, and how)
Topic: _____________________________________________________________________________
Research/Project Requirements:
As you get ready to get to work, make sure you know what you are required to do. Consult rubrics and/or
directions and expectations and list ALL Requirements below.
Example: My assignment involves writing a report on a famous person in history.
My final project should have:
• a title page
• an introductory paragraph, body paragraph(s), and a conclusion
• a Bibliography/Works Cited page (a page that lists the resources you used to your information).
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Develop Questions
In this area, write out a list of questions that you need to answer in order to solve your “problem.” Try to
think through all the aspects of what you need to discover about your topic and then write these things out
as questions.
Below are some questions to get you started. Circle the questions in the box that you used. This will help
make sure you don’t ship over any important questions.
Who is… Who did… Who can… Who will… Who would…
What is… What did.. What can… What will… What would…
When is… When did… When can… When will… When would…
Where is… Where did… Where can… Where will… Where would…
Which is… Which did… Which can… Which will… Which would…
Why is.. Why did… Why can… Why will… Why would…
How is… How did… How can… How will… How would…
Questions:
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Complete the K-W Chart Below. It will help you identify the information that you need.
K-W Chart
K What do I know? W What do I want to find out?
Step #2 Information Seeking Strategies. Think of possible information sources.
Brainstorm then determine the range of possible sources and prioritize them with respect to the value,
availability and content.
Key Question:
Which resources are the best to use for my topic or project?
Strategy:
Use the Chart below, or a list given to you by your teacher or librarian, to
help you choose appropriate sources.
Possible Sources
Non-fiction books Online resource/Databases:
Reference books: EBSCO
Atlas Facts on File
Encyclopedia Grolier
Biographical dictionary or encyclopedia World Book
Almanac Other
Magazine
Newspaper Web site
Other: Interview
Video
It’s important to think about the websites you use for your report or project. There are four major things
you should consider when evaluating a web resource:
Website Evaluation:
The author or group responsible is listed on the website. The author’s or group’s
Author or
qualifications are listed on the website. The author’s or group’s contact information is
Sponsor
listed on the site.
The author or organization clearly states the purpose of the website. (e.g. inform,
explain, persuade). Consider whether the author/sponsoring organization has anything
Reliability to gain by presenting this information. Author or group responsible is an authority on
the subject. The information presented on the website is free from bias – gender, race,
religion.
Date
The Website shows the date it was created. The website was updated recently.
Published
The title tells you about the content of the website. The information on the site is
accurate when compared to other sources. The website improved or confirmed your
Content
knowledge of the subject. The pictures, photographs, graphs, video, and sound files
help you understand the subject.
If you can answer YES to the statements in the chart above, you’ve probably found a good website.
Step#3 Locate & Access Information. Locate sources and find specific information within
the sources.
In the boxes below, list terms – words or phrases – that would be used in documents referring to your
research topic. These can be very specific or general, yet used in conjunction with your topic. These are
the “search terms” which will be found in indexes, library catalogs, and on web pages, which relate to
your needed information.
Initial
During Research
Consult the Library Catalog (in school and other online library catalogs from which you can interlibrary loan.)
Use the index, table of contents, guidewords, headings and bold print to locate your
information.
Search in periodical databases for articles relevant to each aspect of your research needs.
Use unique search tools – special search engines or web sites or reference sources – which direct
you to information relevant to your research needs.
Finally, go to the Internet at large – but use more than one or two keywords!
Key Question:
What information do I need for my notes?
Strategy:
Read, view, listen
Mind-mapping, concept mapping, data chart, T-chart for note taking.
Once you have gathered your sources, the next step is to read, watch or listen for information and take
notes. Begin to use the section of the resource that answers the questions you wrote in Stage 1.
Write your notes on a note-taking sheet or on a form your teacher gives you.
Key Question:
How can I organize and present my information?
Strategy:
Write an outline, list of key points or create a mind map to help organize
your report or project
Write a rough draft and begin to complete your assignment.
At some point you need to start putting your information and ideas together for presentation. You are
creating a new information source when you do this. You take what you have learned and synthesize it
into something that is unique to your project goals. So, explain what you want to do with the information.
In what format do you need to present it and how will it be organized? Consider making an outline first!
Here are 2 suggestions that you can use to help organize your information:
Write an outline
List key points
Don’t forget that when you use the thoughts and ideas of other people, you need to give credit to
them by citing your information source. If you don’t, you are plagiarizing!!
Key Question:
How do I know did well?
Strategy:
1. Compare your project to the task as defined in Stage 1 to sure that you met
all the requirements.
2. Use the rubric or teacher research/project expectations
Now is the time to judge your completed report or project before you turn it in to your teacher. Your
teacher may give you a rubric you can use at this stage to evaluate your work. Also, ask and answer the
questions below:
Consider...
Have I completed the requirements of the assignment?
Have I done my best work?
1. What did I do well?
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Acknowledgements:
This worksheet is a modified product of
Jane Sharka for Naperville Central High School and
Cherry Newcomb for Minoa Elementary School
Berkowitz, Robert E., and Adam Berkowitz. The Big6 Research Notebook. New York: Linwood Books, 2005.