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Getting
Started
-
I need
background information on my topic -- where should I start?
Electronic Reference Books
- Xreferplus
- An online collection of 150 reference books covering many
disciplines. Click
here for a list of titles.
- Gale
Virtual Reference Library - an online collection of
reference books, including Countries and Their Cultures,
Dictionary of American History, Encyclopedia of Sociology,
Gale Encyclopedia of Everyday Law, among other titles.
-
The
New Encyclopaedia Britannica, Reference R031 B862N1991
~ A good source of background information and bibliographies.
Look up your topic in the index to get started.
Also available electronically.
General Resources for the Research
Paper
- The Encyclopedia
of Civil Rights in America, Reference R 323.1196 E56
- Encyclopedia
of Marriage and the Family, Reference R 306.803 E56
- American Decades, Reference R973.92 A512...
- The Encyclopedia
of Multiculturalism, Reference R 306.4460973 E56
- The Encyclopedia
of American Immigration, Reference R 304.87303 E56
- Encyclopedia
of U.S. Foreign Relations, Reference R 327.73 E56F
- Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups, R
305.8 H339
- The Sixties in America, Reference R973.92 S625a
- International
Encyclopedia of Population,
R 304.6 I61
- Routledge International
Encyclopedia of Women, Reference R 305.403 R869
- St. James Encyclopedia
of Popular Culture, Reference R 973.9 S143
- How else can reference
books help me?
- There are often bibliographies
at the end of their articles; these bibliographies can lead you
to other useful books and articles.
- How can I find more
reference books on my topic?
- Try browsing the Reference section.
- Browse the shelves around a particular book you like; call numbers
tend to keep books on like topics together.
- Search I-Share using your search
term combined with the word "encyclopedia" or "dictionary."
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Locating Books in the A.C. Buehler Library
How do I find books
on my topic?
- Use
I-Share to find books held in the Elmhurst College library
as well as books owned by 65 other Illinois libraries.
- Quick Searches
- A good way to
start looking for books.
- You can either
look for particular items (such as a particular title), or
you can do keywords searching.
- Use the main
words describing your topic.
- For example,
to find books about phonics, type the word phonics
(with or without capitals).
- The word phonics
can be anywhere in the description of the item, like the name
of the publisher.
- To do a more
focused search on, say, phonics and whole language learning,
select Boolean, and type in phonics and "whole
learning" .
- Browse Subject Searches
- A more precise
way of searching.
- I-Share uses Library
of Congress Subject Headings (or LC subject headings) to arrange
and organize information.
- Subject headings
are very specific; you can guess what they might be, but you
can't make them up.
- Some examples
of subject headings:
- Tattooing
- Titanic
(Steamship)
- Sex on
television
- Chicago
Cubs (Baseball team) -- History
- Dreams
- Tolkien, J. R. R. (John Ronald Reuel), 1892-1973
- Guided Keyword
Searches
- Allow you more
flexibility.
- Click the appropriate
tab, and fill in the blanks as desired.
- You can change
your searching options to look for either some or all of the
words you've typed in, and to look in different areas of the
item's catalog record.
- For example,
select all of these and type eating disorders treatment.
-
-
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Locating
Articles in Library Resources
-
Which article databases are good starting places
for my search?
-
-
Periodical Abstracts
~ Includes indexing, abstracting, and some full text for
magazine and journal articles.
-
WilsonSelectPlus
~ Includes indexing, abstracting, and full text for a
variety of magazines and journals.
-
JSTOR
- For articles with historical context.
-
-
Where can I find modern newspaper articles?
- Wall
Street Journal ~ full text from 1985 to present.
- New
York Times ~ full text back to 1999, with indexing available
back to 1990.
- Chicago Tribune
~ full text from 1985 to present.
- Lexis-Nexis
Academic ~ accesses a variety of news and business sources,
many of which are full text.
- Newspaper
Source ~ full text from more than 100 U.S. and international
newspapers. Includes sources such as USA Today, the Philadelphia
Inquirer, The (London) Times, and transcripts from
NPR's Morning Edition.
You can also call (630) 617-3173 or email
the Reference Department to inquire about a specific title or ask
a question.
Use the Find It! button to help you look through
our databases and catalog for an article.
If you cannot find an article at Elmhurst, you can request it through
our online
Interlibrary Loan article request form. Inter library loan can
take 7-10 days.
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Scholarly
and Popular Articles: What's the Difference?
Scholarly publications publish journals.
Popular press publications publish magazines. Journal articles
and magazine articles are very different from each other. Some of the
differences are apparant in the following areas:
Audience: Who was the article written for?
Author: What kind of job job does the author
have? What are the author's credentials?
Language: How does this article sound? What
educational level is the article written for?
Content: What is being written about? Does
the author write with bias?
References: Where does the author get his/her
information? Is the information quoted easy to find on your own?
Look at other factors like:
- publisher
- editorial process
- advertising content of publication
- overall look of the print version (if available)
Read this to learn how to distinguish
scholarly journals from other periodicals.
If you really get stuck and can't figure out if
a publication is scholarly or popular using the criteria listed above,
you can use use one of the three techniques listed below:
- Look at the reference book like "Magazines for
Libraries" located at the Reference Desk
- Look at the publisher's or journals web site
in the "About Us" (or similar) section
- Ask a librarian at the Reference Desk (Warning!
The reference librarians will employ one or both of the two techniques
listed above if we are really stumped!)
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Internet
Resources
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Putting it All Together
-
I've
found all this stuff -- now what?
-
Who's
going to help me write this paper?
-
How do I do
the citations at the end of my paper?
A print version of the MLA Publication Manual, Sixth Edition, is available
at the Reference Desk, R808.042 M685 2003.
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Created
20 October, 2003 and last revised
20 February, 2007
by Jennifer
Paliatka,
Assistant Reference Librarian, A.C. Buehler Library, Elmhurst College
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