570 likes | 785 Views
What is ICONN?. ICONN, the Connecticut Digital Library, provides free access to a collection of information databases and other electronic resources to support teaching and learning. . How will students and staff access ICONN?. Schools access the databases directly through the Connecticut State Library web site: www.iconn.org.Students and staff may also access the same web site at home by entering their public library card number..
E N D
1. ICONNThe Connecticut Digital Library
2. What is ICONN? ICONN, the Connecticut Digital Library, provides free access to a collection of information databases and other electronic resources to support teaching and learning.
3. How will students and staff access ICONN? Schools access the databases directly through the Connecticut State Library web site: www.iconn.org.
Students and staff may also access the same web site at home by entering their public library card number.
4. How will students and staff benefit from using ICONN? ICONN provides a range of quality on-line information resources including reference, periodicals (popular & academic), newspapers and library catalogs.
ICONN provides information on a variety of subjects to support the content areas.
5. How do I encourage teachers to use ICONN? Practice using the databases to become familiar with the content and search strategies.
Analyze local curriculum maps or the state frameworks and trace maps to identify links between curriculum and the content of the databases: www.state.ct.us/sde/dtl/curriculum/index.htm.
Publish information about ICONN in school newsletters and post on the school web site.
Develop workshops for teachers that focus on their content area.
Emphasize the opportunity to differentiate learning.
6. Lets Look At The ICONN Homepage
7. Which databases are available in ICONN? General Reference Center Gold
InfoTrac Kids Edition
InfoTrac Junior Edition
InfoTrac Student Edition
Expanded Academic ASAP
InfoTrac One File
Informe
Professional Collection
Business & Company Resource Center
Health Reference Center
reQuest
What Do I Read Next?
Reference books (e.g.encyclopedias, almanacs) and periodicals
Elementary school level periodical database, maps and almanacs
Middle school level periodical database
High school level periodical database
Research database for academic disciplines
Combination of all of the above databases
Spanish-language and bilingual periodical database
Periodical database for educators
Company and industry database
Medical information database
Readers advisory tool (all ages)
Statewide library catalogReference books (e.g.encyclopedias, almanacs) and periodicals
Elementary school level periodical database, maps and almanacs
Middle school level periodical database
High school level periodical database
Research database for academic disciplines
Combination of all of the above databases
Spanish-language and bilingual periodical database
Periodical database for educators
Company and industry database
Medical information database
Readers advisory tool (all ages)
Statewide library catalog
8. General Reference Center Gold Use this general interest/business database to search magazines, newspapers, and reference books for information on business, industry, current events, the arts, science, entertainment, etc.
Access General Reference Center Gold
Select Advanced Search
Enter the words poem and nature
Limit the current search to articles with text
View the articlesAccess General Reference Center Gold
Select Advanced Search
Enter the words poem and nature
Limit the current search to articles with text
View the articles
9. InfoTrac Use this database designed for schools, to search magazines, newspapers, and reference books for information on current events, the arts, science, popular culture, health, etc. Curriculum based.
Kids Edition
Junior Edition
Student Edition
One File
10. Expanded Academic From arts and the humanities to social sciences, science and technology, this database meets research needs across all academic disciplines. Access scholarly journals, magazines and newspapers - with full text and images! Access Expanded Academic
Select Advanced Search
Enter the words censorship and books and schools.
Limit the current search to articles with text
View the articles
Access Expanded Academic
Select Advanced Search
Enter the words censorship and books and schools.
Limit the current search to articles with text
View the articles
11. Informe
12. Professional Collection
Full-text periodicals for teachers and school administrators.
Access Professional Collection
Select Advanced Search
Enter block scheduling and high school
View articlesAccess Professional Collection
Select Advanced Search
Enter block scheduling and high school
View articles
13. Health Reference Center - Academic Use this database to find articles on: Fitness, Pregnancy, Medicine, Nutrition, Diseases, Public Health, Occupational Health & Safety, Alcohol and Drug abuse, HMOs, Prescription Drugs, etc.The material contained in this database is intended for informational purposes only. Select Health & Wellness Resource Center
Select Medical Encyclopedia and select a condition from the list or click on a letter to jump to that section of the encyclopedia. Click on the letter I and scroll down to influenza.
Select one of the following from the Table of Contents: Definition, Description, Causes and Symptoms, Treatment or Prevention
Select Health & Wellness Resource Center
Select Medical Encyclopedia and select a condition from the list or click on a letter to jump to that section of the encyclopedia. Click on the letter I and scroll down to influenza.
Select one of the following from the Table of Contents: Definition, Description, Causes and Symptoms, Treatment or Prevention
14. reQuest reQuest is the Statewide Library Catalog of Connecticut. In reQuest, you can search over three million titles located in over three hundred Connecticut libraries at once. You can also place interlibrary loan orders for items in reQuest if your home library offers the service through reQuest. Access reQuest at http://www.auto-graphics.com/cgicln/mmx/rqst/Access
Select Word Search
Limit Search to Public and Subject
Select Add Date Qualifier and choose 1990-1999
Enter mathematicians
View titles
Select a title and view holdings (locations)Access reQuest at http://www.auto-graphics.com/cgicln/mmx/rqst/Access
Select Word Search
Limit Search to Public and Subject
Select Add Date Qualifier and choose 1990-1999
Enter mathematicians
View titles
Select a title and view holdings (locations)
15. What Do I Read Next?
Readers advisory tool for all age groups.
The task may be expanded to post the review on amazon.com. Inform students not to include their name or email address to ensure their privacy.
Access What Do I Read Next?
Select Genre Search
Open the drop down menu next to the box labeled Historical and scroll down to Historical-American Civil War
Limit the search to Young Adults and Fiction
View the titles and sort by author/title or score
Select one title to view the summary, major characters, age range, genre, subjects, setting, and time periods
Create a bibliography by selecting Add to Keeper List
The task may be expanded to post the review on amazon.com. Inform students not to include their name or email address to ensure their privacy.
Access What Do I Read Next?
Select Genre Search
Open the drop down menu next to the box labeled Historical and scroll down to Historical-American Civil War
Limit the search to Young Adults and Fiction
View the titles and sort by author/title or score
Select one title to view the summary, major characters, age range, genre, subjects, setting, and time periods
Create a bibliography by selecting Add to Keeper List
16. New York Times
17. Lets look at search strategies
18. Effective Search Strategies
19. TYPES OF SEARCHES Subject
Relevance
Keyword
Advanced
20. TYPES OF SEARCHES
21. SUBJECT SEARCH Subject Search looks for info by topic
Subject
Event
Personal Name
Company/brand name
Organizations
Government agencies
Legal statute
Subject: global warming, diabetes
Event: Olympics
Personal name: Nelson Mandela
Company/brand name: Nestles/Frito Lay
Organizations: United Nations
Government Agencies: CIA
Legal statute: Americans with Disabilities Act
Note: Subject search mode may not be activated by your library. Will not appear as a menu choice in the search interface. Activate via the Info TracConfig program. This is true for all of the search modes.Subject: global warming, diabetes
Event: Olympics
Personal name: Nelson Mandela
Company/brand name: Nestles/Frito Lay
Organizations: United Nations
Government Agencies: CIA
Legal statute: Americans with Disabilities Act
Note: Subject search mode may not be activated by your library. Will not appear as a menu choice in the search interface. Activate via the Info TracConfig program. This is true for all of the search modes.
22. TO INITIATE A SUBJECT SEARCH Enter the subject term(s) into the search box
Select any desired search limiters (date, journal name, etc.)
Click the Search button
23. WILDCARDS Wildcards are truncation characters
The Asterisk (*) matches any number of characters
The Question Mark (?) matches an exact number of characters
The Exclamation Point (!) matches one or no characters May use multiple !s And ?s which will yield exact number of matches; e.g. ??? matches 3 charactersMay use multiple !s And ?s which will yield exact number of matches; e.g. ??? matches 3 characters
24. EXAMPLE OF WILDCARDS The Asterisk *
25. EXAMPLE OF WILDCARDS
26. EXAMPLE OF WILDCARDS
27. LOGICAL (BOOLEAN) OPERATORS
Logical operators (and, or, not) can be used to create relationships between two or more search terms, with the effect of expanding or narrowing your search results.
28. LOGICAL (BOOLEAN) OPERATORS
29. LOGICAL (BOOLEAN) OPERATORS
30. LOGICAL (BOOLEAN) OPERATORS
31. LOGICAL (BOOLEAN) OPERATORS Order of Operations:
and, not
or
To override the above order, use nesting operators
32. NESTING OPERATORS ( )
33. NESTING OPERATORS ( )(cont)
34. RELEVANCE SEARCHES Relevance Searches lets users look for articles containing a word or words, and ranks each one by its relevance to the search terms.
Relevance searches look for occurrences of search terms, alone or in combination, as well as word variants. Therefore, wildcards and operators are not needed or used in relevance searches.Relevance searches look for occurrences of search terms, alone or in combination, as well as word variants. Therefore, wildcards and operators are not needed or used in relevance searches.
35. EXAMPLE OF A RELEVANCE SEARCH Christmas trees:
Christmas trees (highest relevance)
Christmas tree (high relevance)
Christmas (less relevant)
trees (less relevant)
tree (less relevant)
Relevance searches look for occurrences of search terms, alone or in combination, as well as word variants. Therefore, wildcards and operators are not needed or used in relevance searches.Relevance searches look for occurrences of search terms, alone or in combination, as well as word variants. Therefore, wildcards and operators are not needed or used in relevance searches.
36. SEARCHING TECHNIQUES Searching for exact words or phrases: Use quotation marks - Christmas trees
Ensuring inclusion of specific terms: Use a plus sign before the word or terms
+television actors
Ensuring exclusion of specific terms: Use a minus sign before the word or terms
-football shoes Exact words must have everything in the quotes
+television must have television in all the results
-football will find all shoes but will reject any results that contain shoes and football
Exact words must have everything in the quotes
+television must have television in all the results
-football will find all shoes but will reject any results that contain shoes and football
37. THE CITATION LIST Results of a relevance search are evaluated by:
Where the words appear in the article (title, text, etc.) and
How closely the words match the search terms
Relevance is given a percentage with 100% indicating the highest relevance
38. KEYWORD SEARCHES Looks for articles containing a word or words specified by the user, and presents the results in reverse chronological order newest to oldest.
You must indicate your choice of:
Titles, citations, and abstracts or
The entire article content (citations, abstracts, text, etc.)
39. KEYWORD SEARCHES Use keyword searches for:
Common phrase or slogan
Topic not in the Subject Guide
Article author
Book title and common phrases
Product name
Samples for above: kick-backs, Going My Way, Amy Tam, Catch-22, DoritosSamples for above: kick-backs, Going My Way, Amy Tam, Catch-22, Doritos
40. TIPS FOR KEYWORD SEARCHES Limit search expression to no more than a few terms
Check your entry for mistyped or misspelled words
Use wildcards
Use operators to expand or narrow your search results
41. ADVANCED SEARCHES Offers the greatest flexibility - Can search for:
Specific indexes such as title, date, company, source, and author
Browse specific indexes
Refine, merge, or expand prior result sets
Specific database components
42. ADVANCED SEARCHES In addition to using wildcards, logical operators, and nesting operators, you can use:
Proximity operators
Range operators and
Restoration marks
43. PROXIMITY OPERATORS Indicate how far apart two search terms can or must be from each other in any articles
There are 2 proximity operators: W and N
Each proximity operator consists of:
A letter to indicate direction
A number to indicate distance
44. EXAMPLES OF PROXIMITY OPERATORS W: (second term must follow the first)
e.g., family W2 values
N: (terms may appear within either
direction of each other)
e.g., fleas N6 dog Example: The word values must appear within 2 or fewer words after family; fleas and dogs must appear within 6 or less words in either direction of each otherExample: The word values must appear within 2 or fewer words after family; fleas and dogs must appear within 6 or less words in either direction of each other
45. RANGE OPERATORS Restrict numeric searches to a desired range. Range operators include:
since
after
gt or > (greater than)
ge (greater than or equal to)
before
lt or < (less than)
Le (less than or equal to)
to
- (hyphen)
46. Prevent conflicts between search terms and search operators
Example:
food not bombs
47. INFOMARKS To create an InfoMark, go to your browsers book mark function, and bookmark it!
Uses include:
Predefined searches
Links to articles
Search setup
Reading list
48. LETS TRY A SEARCH TOGETHER
49. Cooperative Learning - Jigsaw Each group has a folder with 3 task sheets and is assigned 2 databases to explore
Two of the sheets are structured searches
One is for you to search on a topic of your choice within one of the 2 databases you are assigned
50. Lets try a task together
51. How did geographical features impact westward expansion
52. Who do I contact for help? Bill SullivanTelephone: (860) 344-2475Email: wsullivan@cslib.org
Gail HurleyTelephone: (860) 344-2652Email: ghurley@cslib.org
Jane EmersonTelephone: (860) 344-2521Email: jemerson@cslib.org
Toll Free: 1-888-256-1222
58. Thank you.