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How to search the Library’s online resources

How to search the Library’s online resources. Sources of information. Books: Good for clear overview Not so good for up to date information Journals: Good for latest research, critically reviewed by experts N ot so good for a broad overview of a subject Newspaper:

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How to search the Library’s online resources

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  1. How to search the Library’s online resources

  2. Sources of information Books: Good for clear overview Not so good for up to date information Journals: Good for latest research, critically reviewed by experts Not so good for a broad overview of a subject Newspaper: Good for daily information Not so good for balanced well researched information Website: Good for very up to date information Not so good for accurate and reliable information

  3. Thinking about keywords • What can you see in the picture? • Note down 5 words that are more specific? • List 5 words that are related to what you can see in the picture. OER from Middlesex University

  4. Constructing a search • Analyse your topic – key concepts • Identify alternative terms or related terms • Broaden or narrow your search using AND/OR/NOT eg university OR academic • Phrase searching, eg “study skills” • Truncation, eg educat* for education or educate

  5. Library Search • Search by keywords, eg Information literacy • Refine results using left-hand menu, eg limit to certain publication dates or particular journals • Click “View Online” to access the full text • To save your results, click the “Add to my favourites” star, then select “My Favourites” (in top-right corner) • You can email the results to yourself or export them to reference management tools (eg Endnote) • Alternatively, log in to save your results permanently within Library Search

  6. Google vs Library Search • Library Search • Easy to use • Finds lots of academic info • Access to lots of books and journals • Designed to find you info • Search results by relevance • Searches quality resources • Free access to full text • Google • Easy to use • Finds too much information • Access to some books and journals • Designed to sell you things • Search results sponsored • Searches info from any source • Pay for academic information Based on an OER from Middlesex University

  7. Key resources • JSTOR • MLA • Nexis • Oxford Reference Online • Project Muse • PsycINFO • SCOPUS • Web of Knowledge

  8. News archives • Use the Newspapers guideto access several news archives: • The Guardian and Observer 1821-2003 • The Times 1785-1985 • Daily Mirror Archive 1903 - present • Daily Mail Historical Archive 1896-2004

  9. Results • Many databases retrieve results in date order - most recently published at the top • Change the sort order to view results in relevance order • Narrow your results by specifying the publication date • Use the Findit@US button to locate full-text articles • Use the Save/Export options to save your results

  10. If we haven’t got what you need… • Place a request: • Journal articles emailed to you • Ebooks supplied when available http://www.sussex.ac.uk/library/info/ilr

  11. Getting help Instant message us library@sussex.ac.uk Bookable training sessions Skills hub

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