Title: Starting Your Research Library Instruction
1Starting Your ResearchLibrary Instruction
- fall 2006
- Mary S. Woodley
- 818-677-6302
- mary.woodley_at_csun.edu
- http//library.csun.edu/mwoodley/COM151.ppt
- http//library.csun.edu/kdabbour/coms151.html
2What is the assignment?
- Paper, Presentation, Annotated Bibliography?
- Due date when is the last date for ILL
- Types of publications?
3What is the assignment?
- Paper, Presentation, Annotated Bibliography?
- Due date when is the last date for ILL?
- Types of publications?
- Citation Style?
- http//library.csun.edu/Find_Resources/e-books/est
ylegd.html
4Why Cite?
- Avoid Plagiarism -- To plagiarize means to
- Steal and pass off (the ideas or words of
another) as one's own - Use (another's production) without crediting the
source - Commit literary theft
- Present as new and original an idea or product
derived from an existing source. - (Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary definition of
"plagiarize," retrieved June 20, 2005) - http//library.csun.edu/Research_Assistance/plagia
rism.html
5(No Transcript)
6Basic Search Strategies Words to Search by
- Jargon
- Keyword
- Controlled vocabulary Subject words/phrases
7Think of different ways to express the same idea
8Basic Search Strategies Putting concepts
together
Video violence
Child behavior
Venn diagrams serve as a visual expression of the
Boolean operations
9Basic Search Strategies Putting concepts
together
Children
Youth
10Truncation
- Symbol used at the end of a word to retrieve
variant endings of that word. - Allows you to search the "root" form of a word
with all its different endings. - Broadens or increases search results. Truncation
OR - Example teen retrieves teen OR teens OR
teenager OR teenagers - However vio retrieves violence, violent, but
also violets, violin, etc.
11Need a book?
-
- 1. Search the Library's online catalog. Try
searching using the keyword search. - 2. Write down the floor location of the book and
the call number where the book will be found on
the shelf - 3. Suggestion series titles Opposing viewpoints
available in print and now online
12How Call Numbers Work
13Need an article?
- Popular magazines
- Trade publications
- Scholarly publications
- All three may be available in print or online or
both
14Types of PeriodicalsScholarly Journals
- Authors are authorities in their fields.
- Authors cite their sources in endnotes,
footnotes, or bibliographies. - Individual issues have little or no advertising.
- Illustrations usually take the form of charts
and graphs.
15Types of PeriodicalsScholarly Journals
- Articles must go through a peer-review or
refereed process. - Scholarly/academic articles that are read
by academic or scholar "referees" for advice and
evaluation of content when submitted for
publication. Referees recommend to the
editor/editorial board whether the article should
be published as is, revised, or rejected. Also
sometimes know as "peer-reviewed" articles. - Articles are usually reports on scholarly
research. - Articles use jargon of the discipline.
- InfoTrac Onefile and Academic Search Elite
provides a limit to scholarly articles
16Popular Magazines and Newspapers
- Authors are magazine staff members or free lance
writers. - Authors often mention sources, but rarely
formally cite them in bibliographies. - Individual issues contain numerous
advertisements. - There is no peer review process.
- Articles are meant to inform and entertain.
- Illustrations may be numerous and colorful.
- Language is geared to the general adult audience
(no specialized knowledge of jargon needed). - Newspapers try Lexis-Nexis Academic or Proquest
Newstand
17Internet Resources vs. Surfing the Web
- Internet Resources include
- Internet accessible databases and journals
- Use a Web interface
- Usually require subscription
- Exception ERIC Wizard
- Equivalent to print indexes and journals
- Authoritative and reliable
- Surfing the Web
- Use free search engines
- E.G. Yahoo, Google, HotBot
- Critical evaluation required
- Anyone can put up a Web page!
-
18Evaluating Print Electronic Resources
World Wide Web sites come in many sizes and
styles. How do you distinguish a site that gives
reliable information from one that gives
incorrect information? Below are some guidelines
to help.