1 / 22

Dance: A Research Strategy

Dance: A Research Strategy. Anne Harlow Reference and Information Services Samuel Paley Library Temple University. October 4, 2004. Goals and Objectives. To provide a research strategy for writing scholarly papers

risa
Download Presentation

Dance: A Research Strategy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dance: A Research Strategy Anne Harlow Reference and Information Services Samuel Paley Library Temple University October 4, 2004

  2. Goals and Objectives • To provide a research strategy for writing scholarly papers • To familiarize students with scholarly print and electronic resources in dance • To enable students to effectively locate and retrieve materials in the field of dance

  3. Getting Started • Start Early! • Do research when you are well-fed, rested, and can spend a few hours exploring!

  4. Groundwork • Find information sources in dance • Find background information in dance • Find books in dance

  5. Research Guides in Dance • Bopp, Mary S. Research in Dance: A guide to resources. Z7514.D2B6 1994 • Edsall, Mary, ed. A Core Collection in Dance. GV1594.C674x 2001 • Overby, Lynnette. Dance: Current selected research. GV1594.D34x 1989 • Spain, Louise. Dance on Camera: a guide to dance films and videos. GV1595.D342 1998

  6. Finding Background Information in Dance • Check Reference Works and Circulating Collection for Overviews and Background Information

  7. Search Tip! • Located with other materials on the same topic within the Reference Collection, subject encyclopedias concentrate on specific areas of knowledge or subjects. • They provide information on dates, terms, key people, and major theories. • You may also find selective bibliographies of both primary and secondary sources within these books.

  8. Areas of Interest May Include: GV1580-GV1799.4 Dancing GV1585 Dictionaries and Encyclopedias GV1601 Dance History GV1743 National Dances. Folk dances and dancing GV1751-1753.5 Social Dancing. Ballroom Dancing. GV1763 Square dances. Quadrilles. Country dances. GV1781-1783.5 Theatrical dancing GV1785-1786 Dance - Biography GV1787 Ballet GV1799 Dance for children ML3400+ Dance music

  9. Note: • Key terms which you find in your background reading • Authors and texts which are of interest or are cited often • Copy relevant bibliographies

  10. Finding Books in Dance • Temple University Samuel Paley Library Homepage: http://www.library.temple.edu • Diamond: The Online Catalog • Keyword Search

  11. A Useful Search Strategy • Start with a keyword search • Examine the list of materials to find one that seems to match your topic • Once you have the record for this one item on your screen, look at the subject heading that matches your topic • Click on that subject heading to find other materials on the same topic.

  12. Keyword Searches • Use only important words • Use Boolean Operators • Great for beginning a research paper

  13. Boolean Operators • AND - requires that both words are present in the document • OR - requires that at least one word is present • NOT - excludes the word it precedes

  14. Finding Articles • Use computerized indexes

  15. Useful Databases for Dance • Academic Search Premier • America: History and Life • Arts and Humanities Citation Index • Biographies Illustrated • Education Abstracts • ERIC – Education Database • Historical Abstracts • International Index to Music Periodicals • International Index to the Performing Arts • Lexis-Nexis (New York Times full-text)

  16. Use the Internet • Online journals • Resource sites • Search Engines and Subject Directories

  17. Resource Sites • Britannica: The Web’s Best Sites: Dance • CyberDance. http://www.cyberdance.org/ • Dance Heritage Coalition. http://www.danceheritage.org/ • Dance Notation Bureau. http://www.dancenotation.org/ • New York Public Library Dance Collection. http:www.nypl.org/research/lpa/lpa.html • Society of Dance History Scholars. http://www.sdhs.org • Sapphirre Swan Dance Directory. http://www.SapphireSwan.com/dance/ • Yahoo: Dance http://dir.yahoo.com/Arts/Performing_Arts/Dance/

  18. Finding Dissertations • For dissertations done at Temple, type a Library of Congress subject heading and - Temple University in the Online Catalogue • For dissertations from other institutions, use the database Digital Dissertations

  19. One Last Step... • Make note of journal titles that appear frequently during your search, then check the most recent issues of those titles in the Current Periodicals section of the Library.

  20. Ask at the Reference Desk for Assistance in ... • Developing Search Strategies • Using Resources • Finding further information on your topic

  21. A Final Reminder... • Have fun! • Focus! • Evaluate resources as you go.

More Related