WRIT 100-01:

Library Research

 

 

Mackenzie Brooks

Assistant Professor & Digital Humanities Librarian

English Department Liaison

brooksm@wlu.edu // Leyburn 218

November 2, 2016

By the end of this session, you will...

  1. Understand how a library works.

  2. Be able to "search everything."

  3. Have resources for your assignment

How the Library Works

How the Library Works

Collections + People

https://www.flickr.com/photos/8601342@N03/4549779936/

Libraries Before the Internet

Libraries After the Internet

Search Everything is:

  • a discovery tool/system/service
  • something we pay for
  • potentially biased
  • one of the best of its kind
  • still not perfect
  • constantly changing

Everything =

  • 384,267 e-books
  • 94,735 e-journals
  • 513,255,675 records
  • 975,050 catalog items (mostly print)
  • 1.5 billion citations
  • 90 content types

Remember

You have to tell Search Everything that you know what you're looking for.

Also

If Search Everything is too much, try a discipline-specific database.

 

A-Z Database > limit by subject

A word on Google Scholar...

Research!?!

words of wisdom

1. Research is iterative.

2. Information overload = filter failure.

3. There is no perfect source. There is no perfect database.

4. Have fun!

 

 

Zotero is your friend.

library.wlu.edu/zotero

Research Workshop

  1. Identify your search terms by picking out the nouns in your research question.
  2. Make a list of synonyms
  3. Test them out in Search Everything. Browse the results, should you add more keywords to your list?
  4. When you find a relevant article/book, check the bibliography for other useful sources.

WRIT 100-01: Library Research

By Mackenzie Brooks

WRIT 100-01: Library Research

WRIT 100-01: Library Research session for Prof. Wan-Chuan Kao // 11/2/16 // Prof. Mackenzie Brooks

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