soci 310

library research workshop

Fall 2024 - for  Profesor Zhifan Luo

TO FIND THESE SLIDES & MORE:

Google: soci 310 concordia library

your subject librarian: susie.breier@concordia.ca

ZOOM office hours most Tuesdays 3-5, or by appointment

Text

ZOOM & H-1132 office hours: most Tuesdays

3:30-5:30 pm

OR by appointment

AskUs Desk
Webster LB building:
 

most Tuesdays 1-3

most Fridays 4-5

AskSusie, every Tuesday 3:30-5:30 pm, ask any question under the sun about research or the library

pronouns: she/her/elle

YOUR ASSIGNMENTS:

where does the

library come in?

later today or in the coming weeks you will need to:

 

  1. Propose and refine your topic and your research question
     
  2. Use specific keywords to express your  topic/research question
     
  3. Find research articles from peer-reviewed journals
     
  4. [eventually] Write a mini literature review 
     
  5. Cite your sources and include a References list in ASA citation style

planned Agenda items

also good to cover

BUT FIRST:

NEED ASSISTANCE WITH ANY  of those items or with other LIBRARY STUFF?

 ask questions - GET HELP:

icon of person asking a question
speech bubble icon for chat
email icon
phone icon

 

at the AskUs desk

 

via chat

 

via email

 

by phone

orange "chat with us" icon from the library web site pages

Need assistance beyond a quick chat,
and have a bit of time to plan?

your subject librarian: susie.breier@concordia.ca

ZOOM office hours most Tuesdays 3-5, or by appointment

Text

ZOOM & H-1132 office hours: most Tuesdays

3:30-5:30 pm

OR by appointment

AskUs Desk
Webster LB building:
 

most Tuesdays 1-3

most Fridays 4-5

AskSusie, every Tuesday 3:30-5:30 pm, ask any question under the sun about research or the library

pronouns: she/her/elle

screenshot of sociology subject guide page at: https://www.concordia.ca/library/guides.html

finding research

related to your topic

Back View Of Man In Hoodie Walking On Pedestrian Lane Beside Yellow Building by Scopio from NounProject.com

my topic:
reasons for (not) walking

 my tentative research question:

What factors affect university students' decisions about walking outdoors in their neighbourhood and how do these factors relate to race, racism or socioeconomic inequities?

person walking in a city, at a crosswalk

hAVE YOUR SAY:

better KEYWORDS AND results

https://bit.ly/3MXSAeC

where should i enter my keywords and search for  

research on this topic?

tell your classmates

Search for specific library books, ebooks, articles and films

 but go beyond sofia to search for topics

use your
soci 310 LIBRARY tips page

Reminder:

see the first section:

socindex search

...more examples

...relevant results might  include:

 (ACCESSIBLE VERSION) RELEVANT RESULTS MIGHT INCLUDE

now how can you access / download articles you found?

what might this look like in google scholar?

entering & combining your keywords

SEARCH STRATEGIES

TIP WHAT IT DOES EXAMPLE

AND

 
Combines concepts. Limits how many results your search produces
 

police
AND
violence
OR

 
Allows for synonyms or alternative terms. Increases the number or results your search produces.
 
violence OR brutality
 
*

 
Near the end of a word, retrieves all words that start with the letters entered. Increases the number of results a search produces Canad*
(retrieves Canada, Canadian)
 
“ ” For two words or more, search for an exact phrase only, rather than each keyword separately. Limits how many results your search produces “systemic racism”
(retrieves systemic racism, but not systemic oppression related to racism)

search tips & tricks
 standard library article databases

handout to download:

search strategies

example of a keyword

combination in socindex

google scholar strategies:

  • use OR for alternative terms
     
  • use quotation marks " " for phrases
     
  • DON'T use AND (it is implied)
     
  • DON'T use * ( happens automatically)

("police brutality" OR "police violence" OR "police shootings")

AND

(racis* OR discrimination OR bias or profiling)

AND

(defund OR aboli* OR reform)

in ebsco article databases:

in google scholar:

("police brutality" OR "police violence" OR "police shootings") (racism OR discrimination OR bias OR profiling) (defund OR abolition OR reform)

findit@concordia TIP:

(YouTube, 7 mins)

Developing your search strategy: VIDEO

search strategy test yourself

from our Library Research Skills Tutorial:

 google scholar ANYONE?

once you have found a relevant article,  use

"cited by" to find more recent related material

1

2

3

google scholar findit@concordia TIP:

peer-reviewed articles checklist

In many Library Databases you can use a checkbox:

test yourself - which one(s) is/ARE peer-reviewed?

 

This blog entry reports on an interesting study which involved many academics, but it is NOT an academic/scholarly/ peer-reviewed article

This IS an academic/scholarly/
peer-reviewed article. Important clues: published in an peer-reviewed journal, academic language, distinct sections, long bibliography of references.

still not quite getting it?

VIDEO: peer-review in 3 minutes

still not quite getting it?
view our video

what about

THAT literature review?

Most peer-reviewed articles  include a literature review within their text, even when it is not separately labeled as such

this paragraph is part of a literature review:

You can also consult literature review journals.  Articles in these journals consist of long and comprehensive literature reviews, with tons of useful references.

Sociology Compass

examples of literature review journals:

Annual Review of Sociology

examples of literature review articles:

Sociology Compass article: The unstudied reference neighborhood: Towards a critical theory of empirical neighborhood studies

examples of literature review articles:

Annual Review of Sociology Article: Is Racism a Fundamental Cause of Inequlities in Health?

referencing &
ASA citationS


For your assignments, you need to use the  

ASA citation style.

 

ASA = AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

typical examples:

in-text citations (ASA style)

Hakkinen and Akrami (2014) found that “individuals are receptive to climate change communications, regardless of ideological position” (p. 65).

Research shows that people of varying opinions  and schools of thought can be "open to hearing about climate change"  (Hakkinen and Akrami 2014:65).

 

Research shows that people of varying opinions  and schools of thought can be  afraid of climate crises (Hakkinen and Akrami 2014).

 

references (ASA style)

What about

automatic citation tools

instead of style guides ?

automatic citation tools

Quick Citation Generators
(for example MyBib, Citation Machine, or  those provided within databases like EBSCO, Google Scholar, Sofia)

* Make sure to  double check your generated citations - they are not always correct! Use citation style guides to make sure all the required elements of the citation are present and correctly formatted.

automatic citation tools

Concordia Library provides support for Zotero.

automatic citation tools

Citation Management SOFTWARE
(for example RefWorks, Mendeley, EndNote, Zotero....)

Accessing resources
at concordia & beyond

 

Search for library books, ebooks, articles and films

what if the library doesn't have it ONLINE?

request a book and pick it up later....

or use the call number and locate button to find it

what if the library DOESN'T have it at all?

search for it in any library worldwide:

... and simply request it!

but you

CAN'T borrow

ONLINE

books

from

other

libraries