Title: ENGLISH MA:INTRODUCTION TO RESEARCH METHODS: 1
1ENGLISH MAINTRODUCTION TO RESEARCH METHODS 1
- Searching in Full-Text E-Journal Collections
and in LION (Literature Online)
2In this Tutorial
- How to locate useful full-text collections of
E-journals and vary or combine different levels
of search - How to find some relevant references in LION
(some of which will be full-text)
3First open the Resources page where you can
find guidance to databases by subject
4Now Select for English
5Start by clicking here
6Open this archive of e-journals (often back to
the start of a journal but usually 3-4 years
behind current issues)
7Here you have a number of fields to work with
8Your terms (with AND understood) are set to
search anywhere in the texts
You have restricted your search by form and by
dates
9Here are your results rather a lot and not
highly relevant
10This time you limit your key terms to the title
level only
11Fewer results but much more relevant. You open
the first one (click on title)
12Your key terms are highlighted
13You now begin a second search
14No results! What to do? Is there a way round?
15You keep your principal term at the title level,
but drop the second term down to full text
16You now have some results of possible relevance.
You open the first.
17Click here to see where your terms occur, to
assess the relevance of the item.
18You try this page
19No highlighting in this item, but there is your
second term.
20To export a citation, click here
21Select which option you prefer
22Still within English Key Resources, scroll down
to open Project Muse
Muse contains current issues as well as back-runs
23To search within a journal or across them all,
click here
24Muse defaults to All Fields but you can see
there is a wide choice
25Its a good idea to set some external limits to
increase relevance
26This search hasnt restricted the fields (you are
searching within the texts as well)
27A big haul, though most relevant items are placed
first
28You try narrowing the fields
29but as this is quite a specialist topic, it fails
30You keep the first term restricted to Title but
release the second
31This gives 3 results likely to relate more to
your subject author
32You can always widen your second term more by
truncating it (you can now find all the variant
endings of the word)
33This brings the tally up to 7 without sacrificing
relevance
34Assess relevance through these keywords in
context
35and then open the full article
36Reviews can be a useful way of following up a
topic. Note how the fields have been reset
37Here are some results.
38You wish to save this citation tick the boxes
39then scroll down to click here
40Now scroll back up to the top of the screen
41to click here
42You can now export your results to yourself or to
citation software
43Now click on LION (for bibliographic refs with
some full-text)
44Also a collection of live videos of poets reading
LION has many features literary texts, author
biographies bibliographies access to ABELL
MLA databasesaccess to many full-text journals
45You can check whether journals useful to you are
included
46Scroll down or click on a letter
47Notice how far back journal access goes (some
journals also have an embargo on the current year
or two)
48 LION is good at searching the critical
literature (and covers two databases). Select
Criticism Reference
49Click on Criticism
The present screen allows across-the-board
searching, but the template is too limiting for
all but very basic searches
50Your search combines the UKs Annual
Bibliography of English Language Literature
with the USs MLA International
Bibliography (for quicker responses, limit your
search to ABELL only)
51You might need to check exact form of name here
You begin with a two-term search. A literary
writer is best put in the Subject box
You limit your search to Articles
52Quite a wide haul your term children may be
lost somewhere in the texts
53You decide to refine the search
54You have narrowed your focus by moving to Title
but broadened it by truncating the search-term
A more exact form of your authors name
55The results are a bit more manageable
56Many good results not full-text, but use
WebBridge to find a link
57No e-version coming up, but you can go to our
catalogue to check holdings
58Here you can see Warwicks holding, from the
earliest to the latest issue (some titles now
updated to an e-version)
59Heres a result able to deliver you the text via
JSTOR. Click on title.
60Scroll down
61to click here
62You now have a page-image of your article
63Item 13 is available in full text and in two
formats (HTML or PDF). Select the icon for the
preferred format
64You have on screen the citation, an abstract and
the beginning of the text in HTML format
65If you need the original page image, click here
(note the icon)
66You now see the article exactly as it appeared,
page for page
67You now want to search by broad subject
68Click here
If you browse in the Subject list other useful
phrases may be suggested
69You can now search this topic, or add further
terms
70But be careful your topic might not have many
records attached to it!
71If you want to combine terms (Literaturecan be
understood in LION) its usually best to use a
more general term or phrase as your base
72This gives you a number of relevant results
73If you want to email/print out citations or full
text links of one of your searches, click in the
boxes, then above on Add selected records
74The window acknowledges your items have been
added to the Marked List
75Go back to the Search screen and click on Marked
List
76The records are distributed under the type of
search. Click here
77Check the list is correct, and then email or
print out
78Add your e-address and select a format. Its
often worth giving the file a name as well so
you can recognise it!
79LION is confirming that the email has been sent
80Use this Tutorial for revision before you begin a
search of your own
- Prepare the most useful key terms together with
common variants before you start - Think about which fields your key terms would go
best in - Dont use too many terms never type out an
essay title as such - When using a narrower field (ie Title) truncate
your terms where you can - Anything you cant follow in the Tutorial or need
more advice? - Contact peter.larkin_at_warwick.ac.uk
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