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Introduction to library electronic resources for Art Therapy students May 2019

Introduction to library electronic resources for Art Therapy students May 2019. Lorna Reid – Subject Assistant Librarian Belfast Campus. Aims and Learning Outcomes. At the end of this library session, you should be able to: Use the catalogue to find printed and electronic books

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Introduction to library electronic resources for Art Therapy students May 2019

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  1. Introduction to library electronic resources for Art Therapy studentsMay 2019 Lorna Reid – Subject Assistant Librarian Belfast Campus

  2. Aims and Learning Outcomes At the end of this library session, you should be able to: Use the catalogue to find printedand electronic books Find and access a specificelectronic journal Identify databases useful for your research Look at search strategy tips Carry out general searching across a number of different databases • Know the importance of referencingsources correctly.

  3. Library catalogue Search for: Printed books – across all campuses Electronic books (email and password required) Request books from another campus Reserve books on your home campus Check your library account + renew books on loan

  4. Finding printed and electronic books on… How to write essays (808.042) How to prepare a literature review (808.066)

  5. Studiosityhttp://addl.ulster.ac.uk/yt-sso/welcome/ Many students struggle with academic writing. The University now provides free access to Studiosity’s 24/7 writing feedback service. Upload a writing draft any time, any day of the week, to receive constructive feedback on how to improve work before it is handed in. The Subject Specialists are academic experts and teachers who read and comment on every file personally. They won’t proof read or correct a file, they solely provide comprehensive feedback on grammar, structure, referencing, and English.

  6. What are Journals? (magazines, serials, periodicals…) • Published on a regular basis e.g. monthly, weekly, quarterly… • Contains up-to-date information • Often the only place to find information on a subject • They can help you with your practical work as well as your written work. • Access to print and electronic copies

  7. Types of Journals Trade journals (short articles, news items, advertisements, photographs…) Academic journals [peer reviewed/Scholarly] (Longer articles, fewer/no images, written by experts, well researched, substantial bibliographies at the end of articles…)

  8. Electronic Journals Use the Electronic Journals link on the library tab of the Portal to locate a specific journal title TIPS: Look carefully at the years available e.g. • Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, 1997- present (available up to the latest issue) BUT: • American Journal of Art Therapy, 1998-2015 • (no access after 2015!)

  9. What is a Database? • Commerciallyproduced product bought in by the University for your faculty • Indexes the contents of a wide range of specially chosen journals (not just those to which the library subscribes) • Basically online index to journal articles and other online sources of information

  10. Databases - some general points to note Search the databases when you are looking for information on a topic Databases all look different however …. Principles of searching the journal databases are the same (broadly speaking!) Standard of results will depend on: Search strategy adopted …….. did you use the ‘right’ words? Appropriateness of the source(s) used ….. did you use the ‘right’ database?

  11. Developing your search strategy….(1) • Analyse your search topic and break it down into keywords (subject terms) or phrases • Start your search in broad terms then narrow it down with additional search terms. • Think of as many words/phrases as possible to describe your subject (synonyms) • Use a separate search box for each search term/keyword

  12. Search strategy (2) Phrase Searching • Use quotation marks to keep words/phrases together e.g. “art therapy” otherwise you will find references which include the word art and therapy but are not connected • Check your spellingis correct • Be aware of variations in spelling e.g. visualisation OR visualization, colour and color

  13. Search strategy (3) Boolean Operators • Use the AND option to combine terms e.g. Art therapy AND children AND trauma • All terms must occur in the search result • The purpose is to narrow your search and produce fewer, more relevant, results

  14. AND connector “Art therapy” andchildren andtrauma

  15. Searching for Alternative Terms/Keywords Use OR in the search between keywords At least one of the terms must appear in the search records e.g. Trauma OR ordeal OR shock Purpose is to broaden search and find more references

  16. OR connector Trauma OR Ordeal OR Shock

  17. Excluding Terms/Keywords Use NOT in the search to exclude terms you do not want e.g. Psychotherapist NOT psychiatrist Use this operator with caution as you don’t want to exclude any references which may be relevant

  18. Search strategy (4) • Limit results to Academic/Scholarly journals if desired • Limit year span by clicking and dragging year markers if necessary • Limit results to English language only if necessary • Reorganiseresults to show most recent first if desired

  19. Wildcards and Truncation searching Wildcard searching - replace a letter with the?Symbol to locate variations in spelling of a word e.g. organi?ationalwill find organiSational and organiZational Truncation - replace the end of a word with the symbol * to locate all the different possible variations in endings e.g. Traum* will retrieve trauma, traumatic, traumatise etc. Psyho* will retrieve psychology, psychologist, psychoanalytic etc.

  20. Finding full text of journal articles • Use the UFindit button where necessary to source full text online • Use the Document Delivery Service to obtain journal articles which you cannot get via the UFindit option. See: https://catalogue.library.ulster.ac.uk/ill/search/local • You should NEVER be asked to purchase an article

  21. Ufind it button If an article does NOT have a PDF or HTML link use the blue UFind it button to look for full text online Follow any link/s provided There is no guarantee you will find full text (as we cannot subscribe to everything!) Use the Document Delivery Service where necessary

  22. Document Delivery Service Request articles & books not available in Ulster, either in print or electronically Request items via an online form available at https://catalogue.library.ulster.ac.uk/ill/search/local Most journal articles will be sent to you via email You must download and print your article within 30 days of receipt.

  23. Evaluate and record results • Evaluate your search findings – assess the relevancy to the research topic • Keep a full Recordall relevant results as your search progresses (email/print/save/RefWorks)

  24. Selected databases relevant to Art Therapy Art-based databases: • Art & Architecture Source • Art Bibliographies Modern • Design & Applied Arts Index

  25. Medical-based databases include: • CINAHL • Communication Abstracts • Medline • Proquest Health and Medical • PsyArticles • Psychinfo • Pubmed

  26. Don’t know where to start? Use the Library mega search engines -which cover most databases in the A-Z list and individual electronic journals • USearch • Proquest Complete

  27. Sample search topics • Integrative psychotherapy • Trauma informed counselling • Art therapy and children with autism

  28. Logging in to library electronic resources Step 1 (optional)

  29. Logging in to library electronic resources step 2 Type in Ulster then click on University of Ulster link

  30. Logging in to library electronic resources step 3 Enter your University email address Enter your network password

  31. Referencing All sources referred to in your assignments must be referenced properly. The Harvard Style – a 2 step process Citing within your work (Parkin, 2008) (brief acknowledgement) 2. Full reference at the end of your work Parkin, M. (2008) Art therapy in practice. 2nd ed. Harlow: Addison-Wesley. See the full Harvard Guidefor lots of examples of in-text citing as well as full referencing https://guides.library.ulster.ac.uk/ld.php?content_id=32009296

  32. Referencing Books – Harvard Style Sullivan, AG (2005) Art practice as research. London: Sage. Title of book (italics) (Year) Author Place of publication Publisher In text citation (Sullivan, 2005)

  33. Referencing a journal article – Harvard style Pedder, J (1986)Reflections on the theory and practice of supervision. Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy. 2, (1) p1-13. Year Title of article Author Title of journal (italics) Pages (Issue) Volume In text citation (Harris, 2016)

  34. More information on referencing – go to…. Portal – Library tab – • Subject Guides – • Harvard Referencing Guide – PDF OR go to: http://guides.library.ulster.ac.uk/harvardref

  35. A Few Points to Remember • Always access the Library’s resources via the University Portal • If you are challenged to login again, look around the screen to see if there is an ‘Athens login’ link – click on this to proceed • Never pay for any information when using the library resources even if prompted to do so – contact the Library • Don’t panic – we are here to support you in using the Library!

  36. You should now be able to…. Use the catalogue to find printedand electronic books Find and access a specificelectronic journal Identify databases useful for your research Carry out general searching across a number of different databases Know the importance of using referencing for your sources

  37. Your Subject Librarian • Contact Lorna to make an appointment for help and advice on your specific assignment topic. • Email: lj.reid@ulster.ac.uk • Tel: 028 953 67411

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