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Research Methods in Psychology Library Workshop January 2013

Research Methods in Psychology Library Workshop

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Research Methods in Psychology Library Workshop. January 2013. Overview. Website overview Background Research Finding articles with PsycINFO Managing Citations. http://library.villanova.edu. Click here to order books/articles the library does not own. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Research Methods  in Psychology Library Workshop

Research Methods in PsychologyLibrary Workshop

January 2013

Page 2: Research Methods  in Psychology Library Workshop

Overview Website overview Background Research Finding articles with PsycINFO Managing Citations

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Click here to order books/articles the library does not own

http://library.villanova.edu

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http://library.villanova.edu/research/ereference/psych/

E-reference is a great place for background info.

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Preparing to Search Investigate your topic

What do you? What don’t you know?

Think about your topic in terms of key concepts Jot down a list of key words (2-3 similar words

for each key concept) to develop into search terms

Think about it differently/ synonyms Develop a search strategy for finding scholarly

articles related to your topic Choose a database to search

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Group Exercise

Develop a search strategy for this topic AGGRESSION Diagnoses Gender Methodologies Symptoms Treatments Ethnic group

Population Age group Geography Region of the

country Time period

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What is a scholarly article? Scholarly articles have undergone a peer review process

prior to being published in a reputable journal. According to the Encyclopedia of Evaluation, peer review is:

Peer review refers generally to the evaluation of professional performance or products by other professionals and, more specifically, to a set of procedures for evaluating grant proposals and manuscripts submitted for publication. For peer-reviewed journals, content-matter specialists are asked to judge a manuscript, often using specified criteria and blinded to the author's identity. The journal editor considers reviewers' comments and decides whether the paper should be published, rejected, or revised and resubmitted. Similar procedures are used to review grant applications. Critiques of the peer review process focus on the low reliability of reviewers' recommendations, but the goal of peer review is to make good and defensible judgments rather than to have high reliability. Peer review is an example of an expertise-oriented approach to evaluation.

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Parts of a Scholarly Article Author name and affiliation Abstract Introduction & literature review Method Procedure Results Discussion

Limitations Future Considerations

References Example Citation:Author, A.B., & Writer, C.D. (YEAR). Title of the article. Title

of the Journal, Volume#, begin page – end page. doi: 1053/45614-5643

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What is a database? From the Encyclopedia of Health Care Management

A database is an organized collection of data that can be manipulated to produce information specific to a user's needs. Conceptually, a database is an electronic filing system with an indexing structure linking to specific data elements. …The basic element of a database is a field, or variable. Each field in a database is specified as a fixed (maximum) number of characters, each equivalent to a byte of data. The data elements may be text, such as a patient name, or numeric, such as a birth date…A group of related fields is called a record.

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Find a Psychology Database

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PsycINFO

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Truncation: an * placed at the end of a root tells the computer to search for all words containing that stem.Example: disab*=disability, disabled, disable, disabilities

Or, start at the Advanced Search screen.

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Scroll all the way down to edit your search. Narrow by language, subject population, subject age, etc.

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Results

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Narrow your search

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Article Record.

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Mining resources Once you have found a relevant article, review

the bibliography carefully. The resources used to write that paper will also be relevant to your research. This is looking into the past research.

We can look forward and see what subsequent studies have used your articles (i.e. – Your article A was written in 2005. In 2007, article B was written and used article A as a reference.).

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Group Exercise Use your search terms to find 3 relevant

articles to your topic Review the full article or abstract to determine the

relevance Not finding what you want?

Narrow/Broaden your topic Add limits Use synonyms Ask the librarian for assistance

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Article Record.

Article Citation

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Managing Useful Articles Obtaining the PDF

Copy & Paste, Save to PC or USB, Email articles No PDF? Interlibrary Loan request Jot down citation information Add to your refworks accounts

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Mark the record for later; Save, Print, Email (and export to Refworks), or FindIt in full text.

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Request items the library does not own.

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Cite Your Article. . Why?

In scholarly research, readers must be able to go to the original source to verify the ideas and facts that you rely upon to make your argument.

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Academic Integrity & Plagiarism

Your ideas supported by the research of others Paraphrase or direct

quote Always cite ideas of

others Readers can easily find

ideas or facts referenced in your paper

Copy & paste writing of others Weak paraphrasing does not

alter the original author’s writing sufficiently

Too many direct quotations No citations to ideas of

others Improper citations Readers are unable to

verify facts or ideas presented in your paper

Scholarly Research Plagiarism

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Reference List: Formatting

List references in alphabetical order. Include only works that have been cited in the text of your paper. Space evenly throughout. The first line of a citation should be flush left

Indent all subsequent lines (5 spaces).

ReferencesBerelson, B. (1966). Content analysis in communication research. In B. Berelson, and M. Janowitz (Eds.), Reader in Public Opinion and

Communication (2nd ed.), pp.260-266. New York, NY: Free Press.Severin, W. J., and Tankard, J. W. (2001). Communication Theories:

Origins, Methods, and Uses in the Mass Media. New York, NY: Addison Wesley Longman. Shyles, L. (2002). Deciphering Cyberspace. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

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Individual Exercise Write out 2 of your 3 citations in APA style.

Instead of italics underline Ask the person sitting next to you if it follows

the format. Create a refworks account Export your citations to Refworks Email the librarian one article at

[email protected]

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Two authors wrote out in citation styleBrenson N. & Thomas O. (2011). International classification of function, disabilities, and health implications for school psychologist. Canadian Journal of School Psychology, 26, 3-17. doi: 10.111/j.1467- 721.2011.01605.x

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http://ezproxy.villanova.edu/login?URL=http://www.refworks.com/refworks

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Contact Kimberley [email protected] 610-519-3073 Chat: If you see my chat box on a

communication guide, then I’m online. Stop by: Falvey Learning Commons, 2nd floor,

immediately to the right of front stairs Make an appointment. Questions are welcome at any stag of the research process.