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Linfield
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Formulating your research questions. What do you know about your topic already? Do you need to do some background reading to get ideas, answer brief questions, or to check facts? What do you want to find? What question(s) do you want to answer? Consider words for searching. You'll need words to enter into search boxes. What if the words you think of first don't match the words used by the authors and indexers? Think about synonyms for each concept. Gather ideas from your background reading and develop lists of terms that are useful. Evaluate for author credentials, currency, relevance to your need as you read. Evaluating information found on the 'open' Web is crucial because in many cases no editors, librarians, or faculty made selection decisions as they probably did for books, periodicals and subscription Web resources, but you need to evaluate EVERYTHING you use. To increase the proportion of scholarly sources via a Google search, try Google Scholar at http://scholar.google.com
Finding library BOOKS (also Videos, DVD’s, etc.) We offer three online catalogs for library materials. These are all linked from the library home page at http://www.linfield.edu/library . Wildcat - Linfield college library's resources . Summit - Shared catalog for three dozen academic libraries in the NW . Worldcat - Shared catalog for literally thousands of libraries in the world! You can ORDER books from Summit or Worldcat at no cost to you. They’ll arrive here within a few days, and you can use them for a few weeks. Finding ARTICLES from magazines, newspapers and journals Linfield subscribes to dozens of periodical indexes! Which one(s) will contain articles from the journals most likely to have published articles relevant to your topic? From the Library's home page, your choices include:
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Jean Caspers. Reference Librarian. jcaspers@linfield.edu Phone: 503-883-2262 |