Sakae undergrad 2010

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INTRODUCTION TO THE HETERICK MEMORIAL LIBRARY A tour of the building and the resources therein SAKAE INSTITUTE Summer 2010 HML

Transcript of Sakae undergrad 2010

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INTRODUCTION TO THE HETERICK MEMORIAL LIBRARYA tour of the building and the resources therein

SAKAE INSTITUTE Summer 2010

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歓迎HMLTraci

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THE BUILDING

Heterick Memorial Library

Tilton Law Library

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ELEMENTS OF A LIBRARY

BuildingResources (print or online)ServicesStaffPATRONS

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HANDOUTS

Library of Congress SystemDewey Decimal SystemMulticultural GlossaryLibrary LingoScholarly vs. PopularPlagiarism and Copyright

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FIRST FLOOR

The library is divided into three areas.First floor – public services, circulation/ reference desks, reference collection, computer labs, current periodicals, microforms, newspapers & new books room. In general, this is a high-traffic area and not conducive to concentrated study.

http://www.onu.edu/admin-offices/csc

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FIRST FLOOR

•Materials check out and returns•Course Holds/OhioLINK/ Interlibrary loans•Audiovisual materialsYour ID is needed to borrowmaterials.

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FIRST FLOOR

Most back issues of periodicals are available either on-line or on the second floor, bound. Several are still available on microforms along with newspapers and other items of interest.

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FIRST FLOOR

•6 terminals on the 1st floor•2 each on 2nd and 3rd floors

DVD browsing binders

New BooksCurrent Periodicals

REFERENCE

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FIRST FLOOR

Computer Labs (2) with 8 and 24 PC’s eachAnd a multi-media projector.

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SECOND FLOOR

Second floor – Classrooms, Communication Skills Center, older periodicals, open study tables, group study carrels, 1-2 person study carrels.

The second floor is meant for studying and periodicals use. http://www.onu.edu/admin-offices/csc

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SECOND FLOOR

Open seating on northend of second floor

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THIRD FLOOR

Third floor – Book collection, 1-2 person study carrels, seating in book stacks, lounge areas.

This is probably the quietest part of the library.

http://www.onu.edu/admin-offices/csc

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There are two public terminals on each the second and third floors.All books save the juvenile collection are shelved on this floor.

Red Phone available on second and third

floor for immediate help!

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Students can usetheir laptops throughout thelibrary.

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RESEARCH STRATEGY

• Finding the right search term• Start big and then use patterns

you see in the results list to narrow your topic

• Most resources will have built into their system a “thesaurus” or “subject” or suggested topics

links, use them• Ask a librarian or your professor for

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RESOURCES

Catalog (POLAR)Shows holdings for HML

and TaggertResearch Databases

General as well as discipline specific

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RESOURCES For Powerpoint Presentations or

Instructions sheets for most of the databases introduced today, visit the p:drive on any on-campus computer once you log-in.

Open “computer” Double click on the “p: drive” Open the “Library instruction” folder Open the “Sakae” folder

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RESEARCHThree basic ways to begin research

1. Catalog for background books, etc.

2. Database search on topic

3. Specific title search for article HML

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CATALOG POLAR -- This is the best place to start.

www.onu.edu/library

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CATALOG

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CATALOG

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Periodical means the same as Magazine

Usually magazines are more “popular”

FIND AN ARTICLE

•JournalsScholarly or ProfessionalPeer reviewed

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GENERAL REFERENCE DATABASES

PeriodicalsAcademic Search Complete

Legal CollectionCriminal Justice Abstracts

Newspapers Lexis-Nexis*

*(Powerpoint or instruction sheet available p:drive)

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DATABASES Access through

either Periodical Articles

Or Databases - Alphabetical & Subject Listing

at the HML homepage www.onu.edu/library

Arranged by discipline and alphabetically to search by title

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ACADEMIC SEARCH COMPLETE

Academic Search Complete is the world's largest scholarly, multi-discipline, full text database designed specifically for academic institutions.

This resource indexes over 4300 periodicals and contains full text for over 3400 scholarly publications.

Academic Search Complete includes full-page images as well as color embedded images.

This scholarly collection provides full text journal coverage for nearly all academic areas of study.

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ACADEMIC SEARCH COMPLETE

Business Source Premier Regional Business News Computer Source Psychology and Behavioral Sciences

Collection Primary Search Religion and Philosophy Collection Sociological Collection Professional Development Collection TOPICsearch Communication & Mass Media

Complete Business Source Complete Economia y Negocios Vente et Gestion Fuente Académica Computers & Applied Sciences

Complete Women's Studies International Gender Studies Database Humanities International Complete International Political Science Abstracts SocINDEX with Full Text LGBT Life with Full Text Legal Collection Historical Abstracts

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LEGAL COLLECTION

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CRIMINAL JUSTICE ABSTRACTS

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CRIMINAL JUSTICE ABSTRACTS

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CRIMINAL JUSTICE ABSTRACTS

Criminal Justice Abstracts, the criminology database from SAGE Publications, contains comprehensive coverage of international journals, books, reports, dissertations and unpublished papers on criminology and related disciplines.

Dates of Coverage: 1968 - current Update Frequency: Quarterly Size: Over 101,913 records as of October

2009

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CRIMINAL JUSTICE ABSTRACTS

Major areas of coverage include: Adult Corrections Behavioral Science Courts and the

Legal Process Crime, the Offender

& the Victim Crime Prevention &

Control Strategies

Economic & Political Sciences

Education Juvenile Justice &

Delinquency Law Police Psychology Social Work Substance Abuse

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CRIMINAL JUSTICE ABSTRACTS

AB = Abstract ID = Identifiers IS = ISSN AU = Author PB = Publisher CL = Classification PL = Publisher

DE = Descriptors PT = Publication Type PY = Publication Year SO = Source IB = ISBN TI = Title

Field CodesThe following field codes are found in the records of this database.

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CRIMINAL JUSTICE ABSTRACTS

Sample Record TI: Title

"Differential police control at drug-dealing places." AU: Author

Mazerolle, Lorraine; Kadleck, Colleen; Roehl, Jan SO: Source

Security Journal, vol. 17, no. 1, pp. 61-69, 2004 IS: ISSN0955-1662

AB: AbstractThis analysis explores the different types of tactics used by the police to control drug problems in different types of drug markets…

PY: Publication Year 2004 PT: Publication Type Journal Article DE: Descriptors

Police; Drug trafficking; Policing; Surveys CL: Classification

Police

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EFFECTIVE SEARCH TECHNIQUES

Quick Search

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SEARCH FOR TYPE

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SCAN THE ABSTRACT

Mark the record

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FIND THE ARTICLE

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FIND THE ARTICLE

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FIND THE ARTICLE

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• It may have to be requested

FIND THE ARTICLE

ILL

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You can cut and paste from any screen, so just fill in all the lines you can. ISBN is the unique number every published books is assigned so that is very good info to have.

ONU
So when you find a book in WorldCat, the easiest way to find out if we have it is to click on "Search the catalog at OhioLINK" because it will flip you into POLAR and then you can access OhioLINK from there."Find a copy" flips you into the OhioLINK collection and then you have to see if HMML has a copy because you can't request something through OhioLINK that we have.Play with it and find out how it best works for you. If neither POLAR or OhioLINK have it, the next stop is ILL.We're out of 10 digit numbers so you'll begin to see 13 digits in many bib records. Remember each edition has a different number so check to make sure you get the right isbn according to the binding you are searching for.
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P:drive, Library Instruction folder, SAKAE folder, Handouts folder, “Critically analyzing information sources”

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Evaluate EvaluateEvaluateEvaluateEvaluate

WHAT ABOUT THE WEB?

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So what about Google Scholar!?

ONU buysFull-textdatabase

OhioLINKPermits

Google tolink to full-text

Google asksto link tocontent

ONU user sees licensed full-textarticles

Run GoogleSearch

Note: If working offcampus user seesonly citation to articles not full text

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http://findarticles.com

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www.doaj.org

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ADDITIONAL HELP

http://www.anselm.edu/library/userguidecja.html -- User's Guide to Criminal Justice Abstracts

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LEXIS-NEXIS ACADEMIC

LexisNexis Academic Universe provides access to a wide range of news, business, legal, medical, and reference information from nearly 5,000 sources, most of them available in FULL TEXT.

The service covers newspapers, magazines, wire services, federal and state court opinions, federal and state statutes, federal regulations, and SEC filings. News information is updated daily and wire services several times daily.

Research areas in LexisNexis Academic cover top news, general news topics, and news transcripts; foreign language news sources; company, industry, and market news; legal news; company financial information; general medical and health topics and medical abstracts; accounting, auditing, and tax information; law reviews; federal case law; U.S. Code; and state legal research..

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LEXIS-NEXIS ACADEMIC

See the p: drive for a very brief introduction to Lexis-Nexis.

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RESEARCH ETHICS

Plagiarism - “...the wrongful appropriation or purloining, and publication as one’s own, the ideas or the expression of the ideas (literary, artistic, musical, mechanical, etc.) of an other.” – see Heterick Help Page, Also Student Code of Conduct

Copyright - intended to promote the arts and the sciences. It does this by providing authors of original literary, dramatic, musical, artistic, and certain other intellectual works the ability to control how their work is used by others. HML

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RESEARCH ETHICS

In other words, to plagiarize is to to copy someone else’s work without giving him/her credit.

Plagiarism is not always intentional. You can do it by accident, but it is still against the law. If you ever have a question about whether something is plagiarized, please ask!

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1. How not to plagiarize your report -- Shannon Hosier Mersand

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RESEARCH ETHICS

Identify any information that would not be considered common knowledge

Unless in direct quotes, make sure you paraphrase what the original author said

Use a quote if you can’t think of a way to paraphrase the information

always, Always, ALWAYS cite the source of any information in your paper which is not considered common knowledge. If you are unsure if something is common knowledge, cite it!

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How may I avoid plagiarizing? 2

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RESEARCH ETHICS

Things that are found in a number of places, and are likely to be known by a large number of people.

Examples: The sky is blue Grass is usually green George Washington was the 1st president of the

United States

So what is common knowledge

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RESEARCH ETHICS

Main Entry: 1para·phrase 1 : a restatement of a text, passage, or work giving the meaning in another form

From Merriam-Webster’s Online Dictionary http://www.m-w.com

What does paraphrase mean?

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RESEARCH ETHICS

When you paraphrase something, it is different than putting it in your own words. When you put something in your own words, you are making a statement about the information you have found, rather than just restating the information. Usually there is an opinion of some sort in something “in your own words”

What does it mean to put something in my own words?

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Main Entry: 1quote 1 a : to speak or write (a passage) from another usually with credit acknowledgment b : to repeat a passage from, especially in substantiation or illustration

From Merriam-Webster’s Online Dictionary http://www.m-w.com

What is a quote?

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RESEARCH ETHICS

A citation is how you indicate where your information came from.

There are four citation styles that are in frequent use at the college level. They are:

MLA (Modern Language Association)APA (American Psychological Association)CMS (Chicago Manual of Style)

Each style has a way to do in-text citations, a way to do a bibliography, and a way to do footnotes and endnotes.

Always confirm with each instructor the style required.

You need to learn how to do citations, etc., but there is a citation software management tool available to all ONU students, faculty and staff…

What is a citation?

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RESEARCH ETHICS

Whenever you use information that is not common knowledge

Whenever you use information that you did not know before doing the research

Whenever you quote another person’s ideas or word, whether they are written or spoken

Whenever you paraphrase another person’s written or spoken words or ideas

When should I cite my sources?

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BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION HELP

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BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION HELP

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BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION HELP

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http://www.endnote.com/

http://www.zotero.org/

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BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION HELP

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BIBLIOGRAPHIC CITATION SOFTWARE -- CITATION MACHINE

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http://citationmachine.net/

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CITATION MACHINE

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CITATION MACHINE

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Ask at the Circulation DeskPhone the Reference Desk –

ext. 2185Contact us by E-mail (Contact Us on library web pages)

Traci Welch [email protected] ext.2473

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