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INST 2980 Research Guide Laurel Crawford UNT Libraries

INST 2980 Spring 2014

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INST 2980 Research Guide

Laurel Crawford

UNT Libraries

Online Research Guide

Scan or click on the code to the left to go to the UNT International Programs Research Guideat http://guides.library.unt.edu/internationalOn the Introduction tab, you’ll find links to recommended databases, websites, books and e-books, and other resources.

You may find more information on your country on the other tabs, categorized by continent.

Get a QR Code reader at http://redlaser.com/

Agenda

• Research Basics

• Finding Sources

• Get Help! UNT Library Details

Research Basics

• Keep a working bibliography! Don’t depend on a print or electronic copy of an article to contain the whole citation.

• Don’t cite anything you didn’t actually read.

• Scholarly works add more weight to your research.

Photograph : Writing, 2012, by Pascal Maramis, is used under a Creative Commons Attribution license

Types of Resources

Scholarly sources

•Library databases

•Books

•Peer-reviewed journals

Popular sources

•Newsmagazines

•Newspapers

Non-authoritative sources

•Wikipedia

•Answer sites

Finding Sources Step #1

Search the Online Catalog for books

• Broad, background supporting information

• Maps, charts

• Review history, culture

• Also useful for getting in-depth analysis

Finding Sources Step #2

Search the library databases to find:• Journal articles, books, and professional magazines

• Case studies

• Explanation of controversies or debates

• Focused information and news on specific events

Which databases should I choose?

Good databases to start with:

Academic Search CompleteA large database with a large number of academic, full-text sources across all areas of study

CountryWatchProvides critical country-specific profiles and intelligence briefing. Find data, background information, news, maps, and more.

Remember: Click the “Find Full Text” or “PDF Full Text”

to get online access

Go to the Research Guide and see the list of Key Databases

Search Tips ‘n’ Tricks

If you know what article you’re looking forPaste the title into the “Online Articles” box at

http://www.library.unt.edu/ to jump directly to access

How to use InterLibrary Loan (ILL)• If UNT Libraries doesn’t have something you need, you can borrow

other libraries’ items—from around the world• Have it delivered to any UNT Library for pickup• Visit http://www.library.unt.edu/services/interlibrary-

loan/interlibrary-loan-borrowing for more info

To get off-campus access to online library resources• Go through UNT Libraries’ website and enter your campus ID and

password when prompted

More Search Tips ‘n’ Tricks

Search Tip Example

Use correct spelling—some databasesdon’t autocorrect

independent

Try different keywords, synonyms, and larger or smaller category terms

Economic = fiscal, monetary

Enclose phrases in quotes “global village”

More search words = fewer results Honduras results in more resultsHonduras economic stability -- fewer results

Search in specific fields by using the Advanced Search

Depending on the database, you can search by author, title, institutional affiliation, even journal title

Filters are your friend! After searching, use filters to narrow results by publication date, language, type of publication, and more.

Citing Your Work

• Citing your work is crucial to maintaining your professional reputation. You must cite everything that is not common knowledge, including:– Free government publications (ex: www.state.gov) – Websites– Unpublished works – Images, graphs, and maps from books or articles

Take-home points…

• UNT Libraries can help you get information. If we don’t have it, we can get it.

• Searching well and staying organized is essential.

• Be ethical! Cite anything and everything that isn’t common knowledge.

• Ask for help…that’s what we’re here for.