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RESEARCH STRATEGIES WRITING SEMINAR Kelly Kobiela, Systems Librarian Heterick Memorial Library

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RESEARCH STRATEGIES

WRITING SEMINAR

Kelly Kobiela, Systems Librarian

Heterick Memorial Library

HOW WILL I REMEMBER EVERYTHING?

HOW WILL I REMEMBER EVERYTHING?

HOW TO DO RESEARCH:

SEVEN STEPS OF THE RESEARCH PROCESS

Step 1: Identify and develop your topic

Step 2: Find background information

Step 3: Use catalogs to find books and media

Step 4: Find internet resources (if appropriate for

the assignment)

Step 5: Use databases to find periodical articles

Step 6: Evaluate what you find

Step 7: Cite what you find

Amended with permission by the Librarians at the Olin and Uris Libraries of

Cornell University

HOW TO START YOUR RESEARCH

State your topic as a question

Identify main concepts or keywords

Test the topic – look for keywords and synonyms

and related terms for the information sought

Subject headings in catalogs

Built-in thesauri in many databases

Reference sources

Textbooks, lecture notes, readings

Internet

Librarians, instructors

EXAMPLE OF A CONCEPT MAP

CONCEPT MAPPING

BACKGROUND RESEARCH

Background research = Reference and Encyclopedias

Library catalog

Look at Databases/Reference tab in the Writing Seminar research guide for a link to the library’s databases as well as links to electronic encyclopedias and reference materials

CATALOGS – BOOKS AND MEDIA

POLAR Catalog – Search for physical and electronic items

(ebooks and ejournals) that are available from Heterick

Memorial Library and Taggart Law Library

FIND A BOOK – POLAR: KEYWORD SEARCH

Looks in several locations

Subject

Article title

Abstracts

Table of contents

Does not require an exact match

Generates comparatively large number of hits

Good if you are not familiar with terminology

Good for a beginning search

FIND A BOOK – POLAR: SUBJECT SEARCH

Looks at the subject headings in the records

Requires an exact match

Provides a results list with related headings to use

for broader and narrower searches

Generates comparatively smaller number of hits

Good if you are familiar with terminology

Good for a next step after a keyword search

POLAR – RESULTS

ebook

Law Library

Heterick Library

POLAR – MY LIBRARY ACCOUNT

FIND A BOOK – OHIOLINK

Materials owned by 92 other libraries in Ohio:

colleges, universities, public libraries

Can submit request for an item to be delivered to

Heterick Memorial Library

Most requests arrive in 2-3 working days

No charge to request items (unless they become

overdue)

Maximum of 25 requests at a time

Items can usually be renewed

FIND A BOOK – OHIOLINK

From POLAR results list:

Button will recreate the POLAR search in OhioLINK

From an item record:

Button will go directly to the same item

Use if the copy in POLAR is checked out

Direct link to the OhioLINK catalog:

http://olc1.ohiolink.edu/search

FIND ARTICLES – DATABASES

What is the basic definition of a library database?

A library database is an electronic (online) catalog or index

Library databases contain information about published items

Library databases are searchable

The library subscribes to many databases so the ONU community has

access to these resources. When you’re searching a database, you

are not searching “the web.”

What types of items are indexed by library databases?

Articles in Journals/Magazines/Newspapers

Reference Information (i.e. entries from Encyclopedias, Dictionaries,

etc.)

Books & other documents

Source: http://web.calstatela.edu/library/whatisadatabase.htm

WEB RESEARCH VS. LIBRARY DATABASES

Internet

Material from numerous

sources, individuals,

government, etc.

Search engines must work

with material prepared

without regard for specific

software

Quality of material varies

Generally do not access for-

profit information

Content often anonymous

and undated

Databases

Usually created by a single publisher

Content pre-arranged for easy searching

Quality-controlled by editorial staff

Most are available only to subscribers

Sources are usually identified and dated

Databases often focus on a specific subject or discipline, but some cover several areas

FIND ARTICLES – DATABASES

FIND ARTICLES – DATABASES

General Databases

Academic Search

Complete

Business Source

Complete

JSTOR

Lexis-Nexis

MasterFILE Premier

MEDLINE with Full

Text

Databases by Subject

ARTICLES – POPULAR VS. SCHOLARLY

Popular = Magazine

Scholarly = Journal

Magazines tend to have glossy pages, lots of

pictures, and can be read and understood by the

general public

Scholarly journals are usually peer-reviewed and

tend to be aimed at professionals in the field

ARTICLES – FULL TEXT

FIND IT @ ONU

Find It @ ONU takes you from a database where

you don’t have full text access to a database where

you do have full text access

SEARCH

WHAT IS INCLUDED?

POLAR

Article-level searching for all EBSCO databases

Article-level searching for a variety of other

databases: JSTOR, Hoover’s, AccessPharmacy,

etc.

Title-level searching for most other databases:

IEEE, CIAO, Proquest Nursing & Allied Health

OhioLINK Central Catalog

RESULTS: FULL TEXT, POLAR

RESULTS: OHIOLINK

RESULTS: FIND IT @ ONU

RESULTS: ILL

When in doubt, email: [email protected]

FACETS: LIMIT YOUR RESULTS

REMINDER!

Kelly Kobiela, [email protected]

Jenny Donley, [email protected]

Kathleen Baril, [email protected]

Reference Email, [email protected]

Librarians on duty:

Monday – Wednesday

8:00 AM – 4:30 PM

6:00 PM – 9:00 PM

Thursday – Friday

8:00 AM – 4:30 PM