Title: Carly Brake, Information Services Librarian
1Carly Brake, Information Services Librarian
- EAC 150
- Researching Authors
2Overview
- Starting your research
- References Sources
- Searching Databases
- Journal, Magazine and Newspaper Articles
- Where else can you look? Other libraries to try!
- Internet Sourceswhats good out there?
- Plagiarism and Citing
3Basic Rules
- Know where to look.
- Not everything is online
- If you cannot find it in 20 minutes, ask for
help at the Reference Desk - Repeat, if necessary
4Starting Your Research...
- 1. What kind of information am I looking for?
- 2. Where and how do I search for this
information? - 3. Once I have found some information, how can I
tell if it is useful? How do I find more similar
information? Evaluate!
5Creating an Effective Search Vocabulary
- STEP ONE Define your topic.
- STEP TWO Write your research question.
- STEP THREE Choose keywords.
- STEP FOUR Consider alternate keywords.
(synonyms, broader/narrower terms) - STEP FIVE Build your research statement.
6Boolean
- AND - narrows a search
- Margaret Laurence AND Biography
- OR - broadens a search
- Margaret Laurence OR Canadian Writers
- NOT excludes specific terms
- Canadian writers and NOT Atwood
- or ? (wildcard) simplifies a search
- biograph biography, biographies,
biographical - phrase narrows a search
- Margaret Laurence
7Beginning Your Research
- What kind of information am I looking for?
- Facts?
- Research?
- News?
- Current? Historical?
8Sources of Information
- Sources of information are books, e-books,
encyclopedia, directories, almanacs, articles
from periodicals Internet sites. - Current news, events, research periodicals such
as newspapers, magazines, journals. - Facts, definitions, summaries almanacs, atlases,
dictionaries, directories, encyclopedias,
handbooks, thesauruses, yearbooks. - In-depth analysis of a subject bibliographies,
biographies, guides, reports books.
9Sources of Information 2
- Journals
- - scholarly work
- - articles are written by experts in the field
for a limited audience - - abstract, keywords
- - references / bibliography
- - peer reviewed
- Magazines
- - popular work
- - written for layperson
- - glossy, coloured
- - many pictures and photographs
- - ads
- - available from supermarkets and convenient
stores
VS.
10Sources of Information (3)
- Primary Sources
- Original document, contemporary account
- Autobiography
- Newspaper article reporting on an event
- Interview, speech
- Diary, letter, advertisements
- Secondary Sources
- Interpretation, summary of a primary source
- Biography
- Journal article
- Documentary
- Conference proceeding
VS.
- Tertiary Sources
- Interpretation, summary of secondary sources
- Encyclopedia, Dictionary
11What if you had to
- find information about the author
- Margaret Laurence
12http//library.senecacollege.ca
13Note how I am searching for Margaret Laurence as
a Subject. For works by her I can search by
Author. I can also search by Title or Quick
Search. I can also restrict my search by
location. Remember to invert authors name!
14Subject Search is very specific and you retrieve
items ABOUT the Author and their work.
15(No Transcript)
16Request title to be brought to your campus
Citation information
Location
17What if you had to
- find information about the title
- That House in Manawaka Margaret Laurences A
Bird in the House - by Jon Kertzer
18(No Transcript)
19Quick Practice
- Instructions
- Choose a topic you are interested in finding a
book about - Brainstorm one or two keywords you can use to
search - Find one book and one e-book by searching Seneca
Libraries Catalogue.
20http//library.senecacollege.ca
21(No Transcript)
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24(No Transcript)
25(No Transcript)
26(No Transcript)
27(No Transcript)
28(No Transcript)
29Start with a broad search. Refine if necessary.
30Try combining your authors name with other terms
using Boolean.
31Citation Information
32Reference Sources Online
- Biographygt Lives, The Biography Resource
- Encyclopediasgt The Canadian Encyclopedia Online
- Dictionariesgt The Concise Oxford Dictionary
- Reference Metasitesgt Oxford Reference Online
33http//library.senecacollege.ca
34(No Transcript)
35(No Transcript)
36Enter search terms in box
37(No Transcript)
38(No Transcript)
39Print Reference Sources
- Canadian Encyclopedia
- REF FC 23.C36 1999
- Oxford Companion to Canadian Literature REF PS
8015.093 2001 - Canadian Whos Who REF FC25 .C35
- Encyclopedia of Literature in Canada REF
PS8015.E53 2002
40http//www.tpl.toronto.on.ca
Anyone who lives, works or goes to school in
Toronto can have a TPL Library Card!
41Internet
Doing research on the Web is like using a library
assembled piecemeal by pack rats and vandalized
nightly. - Roger Ebert
42Bottom of the Research by Subject Literature page
43Evaluate!
- Authority/Credibility-Is there an author?, Who is
the source of this information? - Date-Is this info up-to-date?
- Bias- Is only one opinion presented?
- Relevant-Is this relevant to my research
question? - Reliable-Is the information supported with
sufficient evidence? Is there a Bibliography or
Works Cited page with references cited?
44www.whitehouse.org
45www.whitehouse.gov
46Plagiarism and Citing Sources
According to the Seneca College Academic Policy,
plagiarism is
Plagiarism is using someone elses work (words,
images, ideas, phrases, signatures, or
computations) and presenting it as ones own,
instead of properly documenting every source.
(Office of the Registrar, 2005)
Office of the Registrar. (2005, September 29)
2005-2006 Academic Policy. Toronto Seneca
College of Applied Arts and Technology.
Retrieved November 7, 2005 from
http//www.senecac.on.ca/home/academic_policy/0506
_09_cheat.html
47http//library.senecacollege.ca
48And of Course...
- Ask for help at the Reference Desk
- 4164915050 Ext. 3038
- http//people.senecac.on.ca/carly.brake