200 likes | 317 Views
Using Databases…. …to find reliable articles for Biology What databases can we use? What search techniques can we use? What is a peer reviewed article ? How do you know if an article is reliable ?. DATABASES :.
E N D
Using Databases… …to find reliable articles for Biology • What databases can we use? • What search techniques can we use? • What is a peer reviewed article? • How do you know if an article is reliable?
DATABASES: • A collection of magazines, newspapers, academic journals, and other resources available online with a subscription • Easy to find reliable scientific research • Contains more free ACADEMIC SOURCES than the general Internet
What’s an “academic” source? • Published by experts: researchers, universities, academic societies, professional organizations • Often peer-reviewed (“refereed”) “…highly valued… because they contain articles that have been screened by an author's peers (people who work in the same field as the author).”
ProQuest • Irvington’s own database! • Please do NOT share password with non-IHS students • Username: ihsproquest • Password: irvingt0n
Sort by Source Type Sort by source type on left
Peer Reviewed Articles: • In E-Library, look for purple bar: • In SIRS, look under magazines; may need to Google title of publication (Ex: Journal of American Pediatrics. Not the article title)
Alameda County Library • Sign up for an e-cardsee link at irvington.org/library • This form does have some technical issues. If you have trouble, see Ms. McAuley in the library
After you have a card number… • Go to www.aclibrary.org • Under the “Research” drop-down menu, • Choose “A-Z Resources”
Don’t search for your topic in this main screen! This is just a list of databases. You have to choose one database to search.
How Do I Search in a database? • Use strings of KEYWORDS, NOT whole sentences. What effects will global warming have on people and our environment? Global warming Climate change Effects Etc.
Narrow or Broaden Results • Limit to FULL TEXT • Narrow by TYPE • Boolean operators: try connecting keywords using AND, OR, NOT • Scan (quickly look through) results for sources that seem useful. • Click on the title or “Full Text” and read! The next few slides give some examples of useful databases for science…
EBSCOHost: A good general database Advanced Search:
World Wide Science • On the Internet (no card needed) • Some articles unavailable in full text
GreenFile Greenfile
JSTOR (short for Journal Storage): A great database! • http://www.jstor.org/ • Click Advanced Search • Check box: “Only Content I Can Access” • Search using keywords
IPL (Internet Public Library) • www.ipl.org • Websites reviewed by librarians
Citing Journal Articles from a Database Dolby, Nadine. “Research in Youth Culture.” Social Work and Society 50.1 (2008): 173-96. ProQuest. Web. 5 Oct. 2014. <www.urlgoeshere.com>. -Name of the database is included. -If required to include URL, put at end:<www.example.com>. -If no pages given: n. pag. -This is for academic journals only. Other databases resources like encyclopedia articles should be cited as whatever they are. The database labels each type of source.