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How Do I Get Started? Creating a search strategy: Module for first year undergraduates

How Do I Get Started?

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How Do I Get Started?. Creating a search strategy: Module for first year undergraduates. Who are You?. First Year undergraduates at Emerson College taking a required interdisciplinary research and writing course. Course title: “Staging American Women: The Culture of Burlesque”. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: How Do I Get Started?

How Do I Get Started?

Creating a search strategy: Module for first year undergraduates

Page 2: How Do I Get Started?

Who are You?

• First Year undergraduates at Emerson College taking a required interdisciplinary research and writing course.

• Course title: “Staging American Women: The Culture of Burlesque”.

Image used under CC license from Moggs Oceanlane http://www.flickr.com/photos/moggsoceanlane/3361128840/in/photostream/

Page 3: How Do I Get Started?

Overall Program

• To improve the research, information use, and citation skills of first year students in their immediate work.

• Introduce and acclimate first year students to the library and its resources to instill research and investigation practices for lifelong learning.

Page 4: How Do I Get Started?

The Modules

1. How to formulate a research question, break it down, and begin the search.

2. How to find books and reference materials on a topic and read call numbers in the library.

3. Tips and tricks of database and OPAC searching.4. How to evaluate the validity and usefulness of

(online and database) information.5. Appropriate use of information and sources.6. Questions and review.

Page 5: How Do I Get Started?

Learning Outcomes: Module One

• Break down a research question into key words and synonyms for searching.

• Become familiar with research topic vocabulary by searching online reference resources.

• Choose discipline-appropriate databases and online resources and use our keywords and topic vocabulary to search them.

• Use the thesaurus and other tools to find subject terms used by an online database.

Page 6: How Do I Get Started?

On with the show!

Image used under CC license from daskerst, http://www.flickr.com/photos/daskerst/2256561258/

Page 7: How Do I Get Started?

Strategize!

• When starting your research, you want to form a question to answer and break it down into searchable pieces.

• We might think of these terms as keywords or key topics.

• It helps to think of synonyms, both broad and specific; this will help you broaden and narrow your search later.

Page 8: How Do I Get Started?

First step: Breaking down a question

• What were the similarities and differences between burlesque performances in the United States and Great Britain in the 1800s?

Image used under CC licence from M@nnie http://www.flickr.com/photos/manus/2218175249/

Page 9: How Do I Get Started?

Next step: Know your subject!

• Sometimes knowing more about your topic can help you with your search.

• Reference books in the reference section (we’ll talk about that next time).

• Online reference resources: Wikipedia and Credo Reference.

• Wikipedia, really?• Yes, but remember: ONLY use these as a jumping off

point!

Page 10: How Do I Get Started?

Wikipedia

• Let’s search the term “Burlesque”. What do we find?– General information on the history of Burlesque.– Important figures and performers in Burlesque.– List of books, articles, Websites about Burlesque.

• All of these things can help you to form a question in the first place, refine your original question, or simply broaden your search.

• REMEMBER: Don’t use Wikipedia as a source in your final bibliography. Think of it as a helper to guide you to better sources.

Image from http://www.wikipedia.org

Page 11: How Do I Get Started?

Credo Reference

• Similar to Wikipedia, but much broader in scope: includes entries from several kinds of professionally created dictionaries, encyclopedias, etc.

• Let’s search “Burlesque”. • It can give us the same type of information as

Wikipedia, but it can give us MORE of it from many sources.

• Available on Library Webpage, Databases A-Z

Image from http://corp.credoreference.com/

Page 12: How Do I Get Started?

Keyword Brainstorm Chart

Page 13: How Do I Get Started?

Ta Da! The End

Librarian: Lisa Molinelli, [email protected]

Image from George Eastman House http://www.flickr.com/photos/george_eastman_house/3122870673/

Page 14: How Do I Get Started?

Assessment

• Non-graded pretest given to students before library instruction begins to assess what they already know about library resources and search process.

• After each session, non-graded quiz posted on class’ online class space to be completed for credit before next session.

• Students’ “final paper” bibliographies will be graded by the library instructor as well as the professor.