Title: LIBRARY TRAINING: WHERE
1LIBRARY TRAININGWHERE HOW TO FIND
INFORMATION FOR YOUR RESEARCH ASSIGNMENT/PROJECT
Pavlinka Kovatcheva, UJ Sciences Librarian,
APKpkovatcheva_at_uj.ac.za
- GEOLOGY STUDENTS
- February 2011
2PRESENTATION OUTLINE
- Library orientation
- - Geology Subject Portal
- 2. Steps in online searching
- 3. Searching techniques
- Electronic Databases Internet
- Reference Techniques
- Conclusion
3UJ Library Portal (http//www.uj.ac.za/library)
4UJ Sciences Librarian Portalhttp//ujsciencelibra
rian.pbworks.com/
5GEOLOGY SUBJECT PORTAL http//ujsciencelibrarian.
pbworks.com/Geology
6STEPS IN ONLINE SEARCHINGhttp//ujsciencelibraria
n.pbworks.com/Getting-Started-with-your-Research
- Step 1 Identify your topic
- Step 2 Identify the main terms or keywords
- Step 3 Combine terms by using Boolean Operators
- Step 4 Locate and access the Library Resources
- Step 5 Select an appropriate source
- Step 6 Ongoing evaluation of the search results
- Step 7 Refine your search
- Step 8 Gather citations for your sources
- Step 9 Stop searching and start writing
7STEP 1 IDENTIFY YOUR TOPIC
- Identify your topic
- Narrow your topic
- - Look up your topic in general and specialised
subject encyclopedias. What you find will provide
you with more specific topics, and possible
approaches or angles to take in your paper - Write down your topic
- - Develop several questions that you plan
to answer in your paper or speech. This is an
important step because your questions will become
topic sentences for your outline. If you write
leading questions, itll be easier to come up
with a list of answers and issues to address in
your project
8STEP 2 IDENTIFY THE MAIN TERMS OR KEYWORDS
- Brainstorm for a list of search terms/ keywords
- Think of words and phrases related to your topic.
Consider broader and narrower terms, and synonyms
(words that have the same meaning). - Look up these terms in dictionaries and
thesaurus. You may want to look them up in
subject specific dictionaries and encyclopedias. - Establish logical relationship between the
keywords, by making use of different Searching
techniques (AND, OR) - Are there any specific names (authors,
geographical locations, etc.) that would focus my
search?
9MAKE USE OF THE THESAURUS
- Keyword searching is not always the most
effective or efficient approach. Different
authors use different words to describe the same
concept or topic. Trying to think of all the
possible ways a concept could be expressed by
different people takes much mental effort, and
chances are that you'll still miss a few. - Instead, let the database itself help you. Most
databases have a Thesaurus with lists of selected
words or phrases. Known as "controlled
vocabulary," it is used to describe concepts. The
single word or phrase listed in the Thesaurus can
replace all the words you might try to think of
yourself.
10STEP 3 COMBINE TERMS BY USING BOOLEAN OPERATORS
- When searching the UJ Library Catalogue, the
Databases or the Internet websites, using Boolean
Operators helps you broaden or narrow your search
and its results. - - AND narrows your search,
- - OR broadens your search, and
- - NOT excludes certain terms
- Use truncation symbols (usually ? or ) to
capture all forms of words (e.g., educat? will
retrieve education, educating, and educators).
11STEP 4 LOCATE AND ACCESS THE LIBRARY RESOURCES
- Go to UJ Library webpage (http//www.uj.ac.za/lib
rary) - Click on Subject Collections
- Then select Science Librarian Portal or go
directly to http//ujsciencelibrarian.pbwiki.com/
- Most databases can be accessed remotely (from
home). -
- Only Surname, student number PIN will be
requested for access. - Click on UJLink (http//ujlink.uj.ac.za)
- To search for the print collections in the
library, and also to search simultaneously
multiple resources (print AND electronic)
12STEP 5 SELECT AN APPROPRIATE SOURCE
- For background, basic information consider
- - UJ Library catalogue to search for print
general and subject specific encyclopedias,
handbooks, and other reference books. - - Databases to search for electronic reference
works, such as Oxford Reference Online, Oxford
English Dictionary, Combined Chemical
Dictionary, AccessScience (McGraw), Encyclopedia
of Energy, Gale Virtual Reference Online, etc.
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14Finding Information in Books
- Find books for overview retrospective
information on the Assignment topic - For Print Books search the UJ Library Catalogue
(UJLink). Recommended books are also placed on
the Reserve Short Loan Collection (Library
Foyer). Used only in the Library for 2h. - For Online Books search the Databases (Remote
Access, Multiple users) - CRC ENVIROnetBASE Online Books on Biogeography,
Ecology, Ecosystems, etc. - My iLibrary
- Access to ONLINE BOOKS is also available through
UJLINK
15UJ LINK Course Reserves for Geology Recommended
Prescribed books on Reserve Short Loan
Collection (Library Foyer). Used only in the
Library for 2h.
http//ujlink.uj.ac.za/search/r
16UJ LINK Search for Books with the New DEWEY
Classification system
17New Classification System for Books Dewey
http//bpeck.com/references/DDC/ddc_mine500.htm
18Online Book References Collections
http//ujsciencelibrarian.pbworks.com/Online-Books
19STEP 5 SELECT AN APPROPRIATE SOURCE
- Find Current Information
- - For current information consider the use of
the Electronic Bibliographic and Full-text
databases available in the library - - Additional search from Internet
- Consider searching selected Internet websites,
such as Google Scholar Scirus etc.
20STEP 6 ONGOING EVALUATION OF THE SEARCH RESULTS
- Evaluation determines how effectively and
efficiently the information need was satisfied. - Evaluate the sources youve found, paying
attention to their relevance, purpose, value,
accuracy, and authors credibility. - Remember that Internet sources should also be
evaluated for bias and inaccuracies, and you
should pay attention to whether the sites present
facts or opinions. - As you start to create an outline of your project
or paper, note areas where you need more
information.
21STEP 7 REFINE YOUR SEARCH
- You need to be prepared for unexpected search
results (too much or too little information
retrieved) - If your search did not yield enough results, try
searching a broader terms. If your search yield
too many results, use narrow terms. Make sure you
are using Boolean operators correctly - Use alternative keywords (synonyms)
- Try different databases
- You wont necessarily use everything you find. As
a rough guide, find twice as many sources as your
lecturer requires. For example, if your lecturer
asks you to find 5 items, aim for 10. This allows
you to choose from plenty of sources rather than
being stuck with too few or relying on an
incomplete collection of sources
22STEP 8 GATHER CITATIONS FOR YOUR SOURCES
- As youre doing research, you should write down
bibliographic information (author, title,
publisher, date of publication, etc.). This will
enable you to be prepared to create a
Bibliography or Works Cited list. - In books, youll find this information collected
on a title page, one of the first few pages.
Online journals print this information at the
top/bottom of the page. Print journals usually
have this information on their covers. - Web pages are inconsistent about this
information, so ask for help if you have trouble
locating it.
23STEP 9 STOP SEARCHING AND START WRITING
- How do you know when you have enough information?
- This is hard to judge, but you need to do more
research if you still have questions about what
youre reading or if there are names and ideas
that youre not sure about. - Once you have all the information you have
gathered it is time to start writing - If you still experience problems, contact your
Subject Librarian for assistance
24SEARCHING TECHNIQUES
- SEARCH STRATEGY
- Understand what is required
- Identify the concepts
- Translate the concepts into keywords
- BOOLEAN OPERATORS ( AND, OR , NOT)
- TRUNCATION ( )
- WILDCARD CHARACTER ( ? )
- PHRASE SEARCH ( )
- USE OF PARENTHESIS ( )
25BOOLEAN OPERATORSAND, OR , NOT
- DEFINITIONS OF BOOLEAN OPERATORS
- Boolean operators are the words used to group,
combine, or intersect terms when searching
databases. Boolean operators provide a way to
tell a computer how to combine your keywords/
terms. In other words, they refer to the logical
relationship among search terms. - The operators used more frequently are AND OR
and not so frequently NOT. They are used to
combine search terms to broaden or narrow the
results of a search. - OR is more, AND is less.
26BOOLEAN OPERATOR AND
- Using AND tells the database to look for all the
words on either side of the AND. Thus, a search
for "success AND adult learners AND distance
education" would retrieve only records in which
every one of the terms appears. - The more words you connect with AND, the fewer
records the database will retrieve. - AND means "I want only documents that contain
both words."
27BOOLEAN OPERATOR OR
- OR
- The more terms or concepts we combine in a
search with OR logic, the more records we will
retrieve. - Using OR tells the database to look for any one
of the words on either side of the OR. - Thus, a search for "success OR achievement OR
progress OR goals" would retrieve records in
which any one of the terms appears. - OR means "I want documents that contain either
word I don't care which word."
28BOOLEAN OPERATOR NOT
- Although NOT is considered a connector, it
probably should be called - "The Eliminator." Use it very carefully, as it
excludes any terms that follow it. - You may end up losing valuable information when
you use NOT. - NOT logic is used to exclude a particular
concept/term. We retrieve only records in which
ONLY ONE of the terms is present.
29TRUNCATION ( )
- After identifying all the possible relevant
search terms, decide whether you are going to use
Truncation to EXTEND the search strategy. - Truncation may be used to restrict the search to
WORD STEM ( right truncation) - geolog will retrieve information on geology,
geological, geologist, etc. - mineralog will retrieve information on
mineralogy, mineralogical, mineralogist, etc.
30WILDCARD CHARACTER ( ? )
- Wildcard can be helpful when you are unsure of
the correct spelling of a word. - A wildcard is the insertion of a question mark
symbol in place of a letter that you do not know. - wom?n will search for both women and woman
- Use wildcard to retrieve words that are used
differently in American and English languages. - organi?ation will find organiSation and
organiZation
31PHRASE SEARCHING ( )
- Phrase searching, use the quotation marks to
search for results that contained those words
together, rather than search for all instances of
each separate word - economic geology
- South Africa
- igneous petrology
-
-
32USE OF PARENTHESIS ( )
- The use of parenthesis is very important in the
grouping of search terms, not only for clarity
on search terms representing the same concept,
but also for instructing the computer in WHAT
ORDER the search should be executed. - (Achondrites OR Stony meteorites) AND
occurrence - The word occurance will be combined with both
terms before creating the final set
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34ELECTRONIC DATABASES INTERNET
- Difference between Bibliographic Full-text
databases - Bibliographic databases the Research plan
- How to find FULL-TEXT journals in the library
- How to find a specific journals electronically
A-to-Z list - Electronic Databases (Bibliographic Full-text)
- How to search the electronic databases for
articles/references
35DIFFERENCE BETWEEN BIBLIOGRAPHIC AND FULL-TEXT
DATABASES
- Bibliographic Database
- A bibliographic database is an online database
that lists sources of information and describes
the information, but that does not include the
text of the information itself. It contains only
references to various types of documents such as
journal articles, books, conference papers and
reports. - Full-text database
- A full-text database holds the complete text of
original sources. The user can read the article,
print, e-mail or download a copy. -
- NOTE
- Full-text databases also provides access to
abstracts only (Some journals have Publishers
restrictions for displaying the full-text
articles)
36HOW A BIBLIOGRAPHIC DATABASE SEARCH FITS INTO A
RESEARCH PLAN
- A search of a bibliographic database is the first
step in investigating a new research area or
refining a research project. - Surveying the previous research enables you to
pinpoint topics for further research or
replication of that research. - You can also use a search to locate general
articles and books on your topic to broaden your
understanding of it and to learn about recent
developments. - After your research is complete, you can use a
bibliographic search as an efficient way to find
articles on your topic that were published since
your initial search, in order to incorporate
these recent findings into your report. - Once references are retrieved from a
bibliographic databases, you need to try and
find the full-text articles.
37HOW TO FIND SPECIFIC JOURNALS IN PRINT AND
ONLINE UJLink
Search for Print Electronic Journals per TITLE
38HOW TO FIND SPECIFIC JOURNALS ELECTRONICALLY
A-to-Z JOURNAL LIST
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41MULTIDISCIPLINARY FULL-TEXT DATABASES
- Academic Onefile (Infotrac)
- Academic Search Complete (EbscoHost)
- JSTOR (Retrospective database, 3-5 years back
file) - MasterFILE Premier (EbscoHost)
- SA E-publications ( South African journals)
- ScienceDirect ( Elsevier Publ. journals)
- SpringerLink (Springer and Kluwer Publ. journals)
- Wiley Online Library
42SCIENCE DIRECT DATABASE
43SCIENCE DIRECT FEATURES Full Abstracts Sort by
Relevance/Data View Related Articles Search
Feeds Search within Results Full-text options
44WILEY ONLINE LIBRARY (full-text, 1997)
45SPRINGER LINK DATABASE
46SUBJECTS BIBLIOGRAPHIC FULL-TEXT DATABASES
- Geology
- Data Metalogenetica (repository of mineral
deposits) - GeoRef (Bibl. Database)
- GeoScienceWorld (35 full-text journals)
- SAGEOLIT (Bibl. Database)
- Chemistry
- ACS (American Chemical Society) (full-text)
- RSC (Royal Society of Chemistry) (full-text)
- SciFinder (Bibl.)
- Physics
- APS Prola (full-text)
- Institute of Physics (IOP) (full-text)
47SUBJECT BIBLIOGRAPHIC FULL-TEXT DATABASES
- Mathematics
- MathSciNet (full-text)
- IT
- ACM (Association of Computing Machinery)
(full-text) - Academic Onefile (incl. Computer database)
(full-text) - Safari Tech Books Online (300 full-text e-books)
- Engineering
- ASCE American Society of Civil Engineers (incl.
full-text) - CRC ENGNetBase (e-books)
- Engineering Village2 (incl. Compendex, Inspec)
- IEEE Xplore (incl. full-text)
- Referex (e-books)
48GEOREF GEOSCIENCE WORLD DATABASES QUICK SEARCH
49GEOREF GEOSCIENCE WORLD DATABASES ADVANCED
SEARCH
50GEOREF GEOSCIENCE WORLD FEATURESQuick
Advanced search screen Select Document type
Retrieve both full-text and references only
Thesaurus terms PDF HTML full-text Once the
article is open, on the right side of the screen
you can find alerts e-mail options Citing
articles Google Scholar author search results
51SAGEOLIT (through SabinetOnline)
Select SAGEOLIT
52Type your keywords to search SAGEOLIT
Your Results List
53DATA METALLOGENICAGlobal Reference System for
ore deposit informationRequires password to
access
54SOUTH AFRICAN DATABASES
- Africa-Wide Nipad (EbscoHost)
- Works published in and about Africa South
Africa - SA E-Publications
- Bibliographic and full-text access to South
African journals - Sabinet Online
- Access to various databases with SA content
55SA E-PUBLICATIONS DATABASEFull-text articles are
available Limit search with Full-text/ No
full-text/ both Limit per Journal title
Accredited Non-accredited journals. PDF
articles will open in a new window. Select
references e-mail / print them
TYPE YOUR KEYWORDS
56GOOGLE SCHOLAR http//scholar.google.com Basic
Advanced search screen Search for Author,
Publication, Date range. Under Preferences
Export to RefWorks option View Recent articles
(2003) Cited by Related articles Full-text
available
57REFERENCE TECHNIQUES
- To access full Reference Techniques document, go
to the Library main page - http//www.uj.ac.za/library
- Click on Reference Techniques
- OR
- Consult the reference techniques from
- South African Journal of Geology
- Shelf number AG6 SAJG Level 2
58REFERENCE TECHNIQUES TERMINOLOGY
- Citation recognizing resources in-text (to
support an argument/conclusion) - Reference list List of resources used
bibliographic details - Bibliography list of relevant documents used
and additional reading material
59REFERENCE TECHNIQUES
- Avoid Plagiarism by
- Keeping a record of all the sources - books,
e-mails, lectures (when, who, what?) - Linking own ideas with that obtained from sources
- Collecting/using a wide range of sources
- Acknowledge, acknowledge, acknowledge!
60Basic in-text referencing (citing)
- In-text reference where the author of the source
is known - Simply use whatever you used as author in the
reference, as well as the year of publication.
Always insert the page number where possible. - Examples
- the result of this is a technical super
identity (Erikson, 196720). - Azar and Martin (1999) found that (As part of
the sentence) - thus Cox (196652) refers to the modern
urbanite as - In-text reference to more than one source
- In-text reference to more than one author should
be ordered alphabetically. - Examples
- More recent studies (Bartlett, 1992 James,
1998) show that - The researchers (Bartlett, 199254 Brown,
187656 James, 199845) refer to
61GENERAL FORMS FOR REFERENCE LISTS
- Non-periodical
- Author, A.A. (1994). Title of work. Location
Publisher. - Non-periodicals include items published
separately books, reports,brochures, certain
monographs, manuals, and audiovisual media. - Part of a Non-periodical
- Author, A.A. Author, B.B. (1994). Title of
chapter. In Title of book. Edited by Editor, A.,
Editor, B. Editor, C. Location Publisher. - Periodical
- Author, A.A., Author, B.B. Author, C.C.
(1994). Title of article. Title of periodical,
xxxxx-xxxx. (Volume/Issue number/Pages) - Periodicals include items published on a regular
basis journals, magazines, scholarly
newsletters, etc. - Online periodical
- Author, A.A., Author, B.B. Author, C.C.
(2000). Title of article. Title of periodical,
xxxxx-xxxx. (Volume/Issue number/Pages)
Available from web address (Accessed day Month
year). - Online document
- Author, A.A. (2000). Title of work. Available
from web address (Accessed day Month year).
62THANK YOU
- Pavlinka Kovatcheva
- Subject Librarian Sciences
- Tel 011 559-2621
- e-mail pkovatcheva_at_uj.ac.za
-