power searching 501 (?): a crash course

85
Power Searching 501 (?): a crash course The stuff you need to know about searching, but may have forgotten along the way! (And, the stuff I want you to know before you go off to college!)

Upload: ahava

Post on 16-Jan-2016

22 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Power Searching 501 (?): a crash course. The stuff you need to know about searching, but may have forgotten along the way! (And, the stuff I want you to know before you go off to college!). But we’ve heard this all before, Mrs. V!. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

PowerSearching 501 (?):

a crash courseThe stuff you need to

know about searching, but may have forgotten along the way!

(And, the stuff I want you to know before you go off to college!)

Page 2: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

But we’ve heard this all

before, Mrs. V!

Page 3: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Sorry.This important review won’t hurt too much! I promise!!!! And it will help you in college and beyond!

Page 4: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course
Page 5: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Let us begin!Yeah! Okay. We love databases and searching!

Page 6: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

And I love your enthusiasm for

searching and databases!

You make me proud!

Page 7: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Our review begins!

Page 8: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Review question #1:

What is the difference between free Web search tools and subscription databases?

Page 9: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Hmmmm

Page 10: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Free Web Search Tools

Page 11: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Subscription or Proprietary Search Tools

Page 12: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Review question #2:

How can you choose the right search tools for you

information task?

Page 13: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Choose the right database for your information need!

Page 14: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Choose the right search engine for your information need!

Choosing the Best Search Tool (Debbie Abilock) http://www.noodletools.com/debbie/literacies/information/5locate/adviceengine.html

Getting Started: Selecting a Tool for your Search

http://library.albany.edu/internet/started.html

Page 15: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Even Google has choices:

• Google Print - Search the full text of books

• Google Scholar - Search scholarly papers

• Google Directory for a subject approach

• Google Images

Page 16: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Review question # 3:

And when you are in the search engine or database, did you know you have a major searching

interface choice?

Page 17: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Simple vs. Advanced

It’s about power!

Page 18: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Why go beyond

the simple search

screen?

Page 19: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Simple Screen

Click here

for more

precision

and power!

Page 20: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Advanced screen

Page 21: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Simple screen in a database

Page 22: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Advanced screen in a database

Page 23: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

And within your database, you will often have to make

another choice!

Page 24: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Another decision:

Subject / Topic

Keyword

Full text

Page 25: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

This is an important choice!

Page 26: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Review question #4

What is the difference?

• Subject / topic• Keyword• Full text

When might you use each?

Page 27: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course
Page 28: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Use the language and structure of the database to gather relevant material!

Subject headings or descriptors in databases

Page 29: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

In some databases this choice is critical!

Page 30: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

More about

subject

headings and database structure!

Page 31: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Databases have information hierarchies

Page 32: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Subject structure behind the database

Page 33: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Descriptors may look different

Page 34: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Some search engines also offer subject / topic cues or clusters

Page 35: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

You can open these categories!

Page 36: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Search engine clusters help you find relevant documents and suggest search terms

Page 37: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course
Page 38: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

STOP the insanity!

Stop using stop words in your searches!

in, of, the, a, to you, why, who, what, on, than, then, their, an, his, her, be

Page 39: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Using stop or noise

words instead of a

Boolean operator

List of English “stop words”

Page 40: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Review question # 5

What are Boolean operators?

Page 41: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Rockwell Schrock’s Boolean Machine

http://kathyschrock.net/rbs3k/boolean

Page 42: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Google doesn’t care,

but your

database does!

Google ignores stop words and assumes an AND between words.

Page 43: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

How important AND is!!!

Page 44: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Using the operator

“AND” gets more

results!

Page 45: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

When to use “+” in Google

Page 46: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

When do you really need OR?

OR is generally used for synonyms or related words.

Page 47: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

OR in Google

Page 48: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

NOT as a refinement technique for problem words

eagles NOT Philadelphia“Martin Luther” NOT King

Page 49: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Using “not” in Google

Page 50: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Boolean operators in databases

Page 51: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course
Page 52: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course
Page 53: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course
Page 54: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course
Page 55: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

“Phrase searching”

• One of your best searching tools!• Use only for legitimate phrases, names, titles

• Best example -- “vitamin A”• “John Quincy Adams”• Titles “An Officer and a Gentleman”• “to be or not to be”

• Phrase searching is sometimes overused: not every group of words is a phrase

• Sometimes “ANDing” is a better strategy

Page 56: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Time for parentheses?

Page 57: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course
Page 58: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course
Page 59: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Wildcards and stemming

• Google stems, it returns varies forms of words

• Many databases do not stem.• Use an asterisk for various word forms

adolesc* child* teen*

Page 60: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Using wildcards in databases

Page 61: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

A question is not a queryHow many buffalo remain in the United States?

Can you create an effective

“two word” search?

From David Barr, formerly of IMSA

Page 62: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

How to structure a good query• Brainstorm several key words and

phrases—the ones you think would appear and wouldn’t appear in your dream document

• Anticipate synonyms and related words

• Mine your results!: be on the look out for better words and phrases as you search

Page 63: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

More on the query

• Focus on nouns (verbs are often vague, stop words, like articles—a, an, the—are ignored by most engines)

• Include most important words and phrases first.

Page 64: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

And just a few more little tricks!

Page 65: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

http://elibrary.bigchalk.com/libweb/curriculum/do/search

Search / filter

by media type(Als

o ph

rase

sear

chin

g

Searching by media type and using phrases

Page 66: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Don’t forget the tabs

across the top of the

page!

Page 67: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Sorting results

Page 68: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Find command helpful for lots of text, or search results

Page 69: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

More like this, related sites . . .

Page 70: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Searching within a large site

Page 71: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

And finally, as you search, consider . . .

What types of sources does your instructor want you to cite:

Primary sources?

Scholarly sources?

Popular sources?

Trade journals?

Page 72: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Consider what type of source is contained on that printout?

• Popular?

• Trade?

• Scholarly?

• Primary source?

http://mciu.org/~spjvweb/scholarly.html

Page 73: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Scholarly words

• Refereed

• Peer reviewed

• Scholarly

Page 74: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Filter for scholarly

and for full text

Page 75: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course
Page 76: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_bombing

When to use Wikipedia and other wiki sources

Page 77: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course
Page 78: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course
Page 79: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_fried_Mars_Bar

Page 80: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Python_programming_language

Page 81: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

A very powerful dictionary source!

Page 82: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Help screens can help

Page 83: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Online, offlineSchool, academic, public

Librarians can

really help!

Page 84: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Habits of mind apply to research

• Tolerating, embracing ambiguity• Using resources wisely• Seeking accuracy• Seeking clarity• Evaluating the effectiveness of your own

actions• Planning• Being responsive to feedback• Being open-minded• Engaging intensely

Page 85: Power Searching 501 (?):  a crash course

Any questions?