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Ways of Summarising and Recording Information

Extended Investigation
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Ways of Summarising and Recording Information

Extended Investigation
01 May 2026

Ways of Summarising and Recording Information

Effective information management is a practical research skill that is as important as analysis or argument. Researchers who cannot organise and retrieve what they have read will struggle to write a coherent report, manage their time, or demonstrate evidence of their process to assessors.

Why Systematic Recording Matters

As your literature review grows, you will accumulate many sources, each containing multiple claims, findings and arguments. Without a system, important insights get lost, sources become confused, and writing the report becomes overwhelming.

Your Extended Investigation Journal is also an assessed document — it must demonstrate your research process. Good recording practices make your Journal evidence-rich.

KEY TAKEAWAY: Your recording system should allow you to answer three questions quickly at any point: “What have I found?”, “Where did I find it?”, and “How does it relate to my research question?” Build your system around these.

Types of Information to Record

As you read and research, capture:
- Bibliographic details: Author(s), title, journal/publisher, year, volume, pages, DOI/URL
- Main argument or thesis of the source
- Key findings or claims relevant to your question
- Methodology (especially for primary research articles)
- Strengths and weaknesses you identified
- Direct quotes (with exact page numbers) you may want to use
- Your own analytical comments about the source’s relevance or limitations

Effective Summarising Techniques

The Abstract-to-Notes Method

  1. Read the abstract first — decide if the source is worth reading in full
  2. Skim headings, topic sentences and conclusions
  3. Read in full only if confirmed relevant
  4. Write a 3–5 sentence summary in your own words immediately after reading

Annotated Bibliography

An annotated bibliography lists each source with a short paragraph (100–200 words) describing:
- The source’s main argument
- Its methodology (if applicable)
- Its relevance to your research question
- Its strengths and limitations

This format doubles as both a recording tool and early draft material for your literature review.

STUDY HINT: Write your annotation immediately after reading each source, while your memory is fresh. Writing “I’ll annotate this later” almost always results in incomplete records.

Note-Taking Methods

Method Best For
Cornell Notes Structured summaries with main points, cues and synthesis at bottom
Mind map Visualising relationships between ideas and sources
Table/matrix Comparing multiple sources on the same dimensions (method, sample, finding)
Synthesis grid Organising sources by theme across columns
Index cards One source per card with key info; easy to sort and rearrange
Digital tools Notion, OneNote, Zotero (with note fields), Google Keep

The Synthesis Matrix

Particularly useful in Extended Investigation. Rows = themes or sub-questions. Columns = sources. Cells = what that source says about that theme. This format makes writing the literature review far easier.

Theme Smith (2020) Jones & Lee (2019) ABS (2022)
Prevalence of X 23% of adolescents 19% in regional areas 21% nationally
Contributing factors Sleep deprivation Social media Screen time
Methodological strength Large sample; RCT Small; qualitative National census

Organising Information for Later Use

As your research grows, impose structure so you can find things:
- By theme: Group sources addressing the same aspect of your question
- By date: Useful for identifying how views have changed over time
- By source type: Separate primary data, academic literature, government statistics
- By relevance: Distinguish “core” sources from “supporting context”

APPLICATION: Create a research matrix before you begin reading systematically. As you read each source, complete its row immediately. By the time you start writing, your matrix is essentially a structured literature review waiting to be converted into prose.

Recording Your Own Primary Data

If your investigation involves primary data collection (surveys, interviews, observations):
- Record raw data accurately and completely — never discard outliers or anomalies
- Note dates, conditions and any anomalies
- Back up data in multiple locations (losing your data is catastrophic)
- Keep participant information separate from response data (for confidentiality)
- Document any difficulties or deviations from the planned method

COMMON MISTAKE: Relying on memory to fill in notes “later.” Research has shown that details fade quickly after reading. Complete your notes within 24 hours of reading a source or collecting data — ideally immediately.

VCAA FOCUS: Your Journal is assessed. It should show your evolving thinking, not just a clean final summary. Include rough working, dead ends, and changes of direction — these demonstrate a genuine research process, not a post-hoc reconstruction.

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