Writing Seminar Rogers

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Transcript of Writing Seminar Rogers

ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY &

RESEARCH STRATEGIES

Writing Seminar Dr. Scott Rogers Traci Welch Moritz

Public Services Librarian/Assistant Professor

Heterick Memorial LibrarySpring 2013

What today is all about

Aid in constructing research strategy for finding resources for annotated bibliography

Field researchPrimary vs. Secondary Resources

Using RefWorks

To get you

started

Welcome to Heterick Memorial Library

Librarians and support staff

http://www-new.onu.edu/academics/heterick_memorial_library/staff

What you can expect from HML

Knowledgeable degreed librarians on duty over 60 hours per week

Friendly faces ready to help 101.5 hours per week

Access to the resources you need both on and off campus

Resources available in a timely manner

OhioLINK

POLAR

WorldCAT

Ca. 400,000items

Ca. 20,000,000items

1.8 billionitems

What we expect you to know

+ even more!

248 Databases About 500 print periodical

subscriptions 10s of thousands electronic

journal titles Juvenile collection Audiovisuals – physical and

streaming

How am I suppose to remember all this stuff?

STEP 1: IDENTIFY AND DEVELOP YOUR TOPIC

STEP 2: FIND BACKGROUND INFORMATION

STEP 3: FIND INTERNET RESOURCES (if appropriate for the assignment)

STEP 4: USE DATABASES TO FIND PERIODICAL ARTICLES

STEP 5: EVALUATE WHAT YOU FIND

STEP 6: PULLING IT ALL TOGETHER

STEP 7: CITE WHAT YOU FIND

Seven Steps of the Research ProcessAmended with permission by the Librarians at the Olin and Uris Libraries of Cornell University

Creating a research strategy

What should I do first?

• Finding the right search term• Start big and then use patterns

you see in the results list to narrow your topic

• Most resources will have built into their system a “thesaurus” or “subject” or suggested topics links, use them

• Ask a librarian or your professor for suggestions

What do I do next?Use library resources to continue your background research.

Definitions Oxford Reference or any of the

subject specific Oxford reference books available electronically

Background Research

Research Tools-- POLAR

Oh no!! There

are so many,

and they are so

big!!!

• Highly structured information environmentWay individual records are arrangedSubject headingsCatalog software optimized for aboveDeal with material in many formats

• Implies heavy human involvement• Emphasis on precision• Preparation relatively labor-intensive• Implies a learning curve to use successfully

Background Research --

Books

Books - Shortcuts

Hold on, I’ve got an idea!

Books - Shortcuts

More to come in a minute

Libraries at ONU

Heterick Memorial Library

Undergraduate Library, accessible to all

• Taggert Law Library

• Library for Law school, accessible to all

ONU ID is Library card

EVAEva Maglott00021559801

Eva Maglott

Please use all digits in your student ID number.

POLARThink of the call number as the street address of the book on the library shelves

Find a Book ∞ POLAR

• Looks in several locations (usually subject, article title, abstracts or contents)

• Does not require an exact match• Generates comparatively large number of hits (not precise)

• Good if you are not familiar with terminology

Find a Book -- POLAR

Find a Book -- POLAR

Find a Book -- POLAR

If a book is available, go get it. Otherwise request via your other two options; OhioLINK or SearchOhio.

•Looks in one place – subject•Usually requires an exact match between your term and a pre-set list of terms

•Precise•Can be used after keyword search has identified specific subjects

Research Tools - Catalogs

Click on the “Find Similar Items” link found on each item record

Public terminal on third floor

Find a Book ∞ OhioLINK

Materials owned by all Ohio colleges, universities, several public libraries

Ca. 10 million items Link from POLAR permits you to submit

requests. Available from Heterick home page

Most requests arrive in 2-3 working days No charge Limited to 100 items at a time MAY RENEW UP TO 4 TIMES

Find a Book ∞ OhioLINK

Find a Book ∞ OhioLINK

1. Make sure copies are available at other libraries

2. Click on request button

Find a Book ∞ OhioLINK

3. Select Ohio Northern

4. Enter your first and last name and all 11 digits exactly as they appear on your ID

5. Be sure to select Heterick as your pick up location and then click submit.

6. An email will be sent when the item is ready for pickup

Find a Book ∞ SearchOhio Access to several Ohio public

libraries Access via OhioLINK An option when item wanted is not

available at ONU or through OhioLINK

A small but growing part of the collection are Ebooks

Click to link to content

Find a Book ∞ Ebooks

My Library Account

Allows you to see what you have checked out and requested. Allows you to renew online (if possible). Allows you to see charges on your account.

My Library Account

Enter first and last name and all 11 digits on university ID

My Library Account For more information visit the Library

Information page

Library App http://journals.onu.edu/home_page/libinfo/

mobile.cfm

Primary vs. Secondary Sources

What is a primary source?  The definition of a primary source varies

depending upon the academic discipline and the context in which it is used.

In the humanities, a primary source could be defined as something that was created either during the time period being studied or afterward by individuals reflecting on their involvement in the events of that time.

Using Primary Sources on the Web

Annotated Bibliography

Allows you to see what is out there

Helps you narrow your topic and discard any irrelevant materials

Aids in developing the thesis Makes you a better scholar

What about Google?

Image by Kimberly Butler

Google and Wikipedia aren’t intrinsically evil, just use them for the correct purpose in your research and at the optimum point.

Internet Tools

Google Scholar

ONU buysFull-textdatabase

OhioLINKPermits

Google tolink to full-text

Google asksto link tocontent

ONU user sees licensed full-textarticles

Run Google ScholarSearch

Note: If working offcampus please see the “google scholar” tab at the Research Guide for Writing Seminar

Internet Tools

Critically analyzing web sources

Currency

Relevance/Coverage

Authority

Accuracy

Purpose/Objectivity

Timeliness of the information.

Depth and importance of the information.

Source of the information.

Reliability of the information

Possible bias present in the information.

Bibliographic Citation Software

REFWORKS

Managing Information - RefWorks Licensed state-wide, access free to Ohio

students for the rest of your life! See:

http://0-www.refworks.com.polar.onu.edu/ Write n’ Cite interfaces with MS Word Excellent Tutorials Help available at Heterick Research Guide for Writing Seminar for

instructions on how to get your free-for-a-life-time account

Day 2…

ReviewWWW, okay for research or just a bunch of crazy?

Using databases to find scholarly research

Field Research

Research

Databases “Pay to Play”

Usually created by a single publisher

Content pre-arranged for easy use

Quality/ content control thru editorial staff

Content usually available only to subscribers

Content source usually identified

and dated

Internet (Search Engines)

Material from numerous sources, individual. 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

What do I do next?

Use databases to find articles based on your search strategy

Research Tools∞Databases

Often tools for locating journal and newspaper articles

Most are subject-specific – some multi-disciplinary

Many give access to full text of articles

Heterick has over 250

Over 20,000 journals indexed, most are full text

Divided by subject area offered at ONU

Begin with a general database, Academic Search Complete JSTOR

Research Tools∞Databases

Find an Article

Periodical means the same as Magazine

Usually magazines are more “popular”

JournalsScholarly or

ProfessionalPeer reviewed

See Research Guide for this and other Handouts

A. Academic Search Complete, Masterfile Premier

B. JSTORC. Lexis-NexisD. Opposing ViewpointsE. Social Science Citation Index

Research Tools∞Databases

General Database

Scholarly journals, peer reviewed articles

Academic Search Complete/ Masterfile Premier

General Database

Scholarly journals, peer reviewed articles

JSTOR

How to use JSTOR

JSTOR was founded in 1995 to build trusted digital archives for scholarship. Today, we enable the scholarly community to preserve their work and the materials they rely upon, and to build a common research platform that promotes the discovery and use of these resources.

Began adding current issues for some 170+ titles but mostly consists of back issues

HML subscribes to the full-text component BUT also shows links to articles outside the library. You must pay attention to what you find.

There is no “FIND IT” button Easiest way to work with JSTOR is to get a free account and go from there.

Head right to “Advanced Search”

Advanced Searching

You will want to uncheck the “only content I can access box and leave the other checked.

JSTOR results list

Still happy because you can get articles just need to “click through”

Managing results list in JSTOR

Exporting to RefWorks

General Database

Lexis Nexis Academic

Subject Specific Database

Subject Specific Database

Opposing viewpoints

Subject Specific Database

Social Sciences Citation Index

Interlibrary Loan (ILL)

Use when you need a book or article that is not available online, not owned by ONU or available via OhioLINK

No charge/ limit on requestsMost requests take 5-7 days to fillUse ILL form on library web pages.

Field Research

Field research can be considered either as a broad approach to qualitative research or a method of gathering qualitative data. The essential idea is that the researcher goes “into the field” to observe the phenomenon in it’s natural state or in situ. As such, it is probably most related to the method of participant observation. The field researcher typically takes extensive field notes which are subsequently coded and analyzed in a variety of ways (Trochimn, B 1999)

Field Research

What is qualitative research? Qualitative research is a method of inquiry

employed in many different academic disciplines, traditionally in the social sciences, but also in market research and further contexts.[1] Qualitative researchers aim to gather an in-depth understanding of human behavior and the reasons that govern such behavior. The qualitative method investigates the why and how of decision making, not just what, where, when. Hence, smaller but focused samples are more often needed, rather than large samples.

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

Field Research

Observation Participant

Direct Interview

Survey Print

Person Mail/Email

Phone

QUESTIONS? Ask at the Reference Desk Phone the Reference Desk –

2185 Contact us by E-mail

reference@onu.edu Use Chat Help feature or the IM IM feature T-moritz@onu.edu