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WISER Humanities: Key Search Skills Friday 2nd November 2007 Judy Reading and Hilla Wait.

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Presentation on theme: "WISER Humanities: Key Search Skills Friday 2nd November 2007 Judy Reading and Hilla Wait."— Presentation transcript:

1 WISER Humanities: Key Search Skills Friday 2nd November 2007 Judy Reading and Hilla Wait

2 Structure of today’s session Presentation outlining useful search strategies Demonstration of databases to show how these strategies might work in practice Time to explore with assistance available

3 OxLIP Oxford Library Information Platform – our gateway to electronic resources Subject and title index  Library catalogues including OLIS  Bibliographic databases  Full-text databases  Internet sites (subject gateways)

4 Accessing OxLIP Access from any Oxford University computer If access is needed from a non-University PC:  Use the Virtual Private Network http://www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/network/vpn http://www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/network/vpn  Register for a personal Athens account http://www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/athens http://www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/athens

5 Use different sources for different types of information Books- OLIS catalogue, British Library, COPAC, WorldCat E-books – OLIS and OXLIP Locate text of journal articles – OLIS and OU e-Journals, Google Scholar Journal indexes - OXLIP Useful websites – INTUTE, Scopus Mailing lists – Jiscmail Dissertations and theses – Dissertation abstracts (N America), Index to theses (UK) Current awareness services – ZETOC and search alerts etc in various databases

6 Try and ask a clear search question eg essay title: Do people have a right to be happy? Is a utilitarian committed to saying that this is the only right that we have? Where should we be looking? What keywords should we be using to search? A mind-map might help in teasing out the associated terms

7 Strategy overview Use reference sources such as dictionaries, handbooks and encyclopedias Read up on the subject in a few key texts if you can before doing a broad literature search Make sure you have a system for storing your references – email folder, Refworks or Endnote, a card index Find out about key sources for your subject Search effectively and use alerts to keep up-to- date

8 Keyword & subject searching  Keyword searching  Searches for terms anywhere in the field or record  Useful as a starting place but results can be less relevant  Subject indexes  Where possible tap into the subject headings or thesauri provided by the databases Citation searching (available in SCOPUS, Web of Science and Google Scholar)

9 Combining search terms Boolean logic Boolean connectors : AND, OR, NOT, NEAR AND to narrow the search OR to broaden the search (synonyms) Symbols for wildcards and truncation  ? for a single character wom?n will find woman or women s?epticism will find British and American spelling  * for truncation or variant spellings politi* for politic, politics, political, politically etc.

10 OR, AND, NOT, NEAR Television ObesityChildren

11 Tackling an unfamiliar database Check the coverage of a database to see if it includes what you want You can use cross-searching for some collections of databases to identify concentrations of useful references Use the help screens provided – check the specific conventions (e.g. do they use &, +, or “and”) Use any subject indexes provided Databases now often offer similar functions but you may have to delve a bit to see how they do it compared with one you are familiar with

12 Critical appraisal: evaluating search results and sources Academic credentials Peer review Use of source material Accuracy of references Currency Bias Relevancy Citation count

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14 Putting all this into practice Searching for a known article  Example: Philosophers Index  Developing the search Searching for the unknown  Keywords and subject headings  Abstracts Full text searching  Examples: Past Masters, Oxford Scholarship Online

15 Searching Philosopher’s Index Navigating Search options Basic search Search Limits Advanced search Index Search Exporting records

16 Past Masters: searching Searching by simple search Power search Cross database searching Results Map Proximity search

17 OSO: subject searching Searching by keyword Quick Search Sorting your search results Advanced Search

18 How can I get help? Contact e-resources helpdesk eresources@ouls.ox.ac.uk eresources@ouls.ox.ac.uk Ask in your Library http://www.ouls.ox.ac.uk/libraries http://www.ouls.ox.ac.uk/libraries Contact your subject librarian http://www.ouls.ox.ac.uk/collections/librarians http://www.ouls.ox.ac.uk/collections/librarians Ask your presenters hilla.wait@ouls.ox.ac.uk or judy.reading@ouls.ox.ac.ukhilla.wait@ouls.ox.ac.uk judy.reading@ouls.ox.ac.uk

19 We value your feedback We will be sending an email feedback survey


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