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How to develop your own Google s cholar profile Presented to Title IV-E Partners & Child Welfare Track. Monit Cheung, PhD, LCSW, Professor Patrick Leung, PhD, Professor University of Houston Graduate College of Social Work November 19, 2012. Go to: http://scholar.google.com/
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How to develop your own Google scholar profilePresented to Title IV-E Partners & Child Welfare Track Monit Cheung, PhD, LCSW, Professor Patrick Leung, PhD, Professor University of Houston Graduate College of Social Work November 19, 2012
Go to: http://scholar.google.com/ • Sign in your Google or Gmail account Step 1– Sign In Cheung & Leung
While on Google Scholar, click “My Citations” Step 2 – Get Started Cheung & Leung
d. If you are in the tenure/promotion review process, make sure to select “My profile is public” for your external reviewers a. Change Photo b. Update Profile c. Add up to five areas of interests e.g., Title IV-E, Child Welfare Step 3 – Edit Your Profile Cheung & Leung
Under “Action”, select “Add” to select additional articles from Google Scholar Step 4 – Add Your Publications Cheung & Leung
d. When you are done, click your photo to return to your profile b. Search articles a. Type your name here c. Add your article e. If you are not able to find some of your articles, you may add them manually to your list. Cheung & Leung
Step 5 – Add Articles Manually Cheung & Leung Note: Manually added articles may not increase your citations, h-index, and i10-index
Click here to see your colleagues’ profiles in each area of your interest, e.g. Title IV-E Number of citations, h-index, and i10-index Step 6 – View Your Profile Click either “Cited by” or “Year” to sort your publications Cheung & Leung
Step 7 – Inform Your Colleagues • After you log out, your profile can be retrieved in the future. • Repeat step 1 and 2 to update your Google Scholar profile, if needed. If your profile is public, cut and paste this URL link for your CV Cheung & Leung
Questions • Email mcheung@uh.edu or pleung@uh.edu Disclaimer: This PowerPoint presentation is only an example to help scholars build their profile in a centralized location across disciplines. The authors do not endorse the use of any specific scholar index or search engine. Google and Google Scholar websites are conveniently available through the internet. Their disclaimer can be found on www.scholar.google.com: Legal opinions in Google Scholar are provided for informational purposes only and should not be relied on as a substitute for legal advice from a licensed lawyer. Google does not warrant that the information is complete or accurate. Be a productive scholar! Cheung & Leung