Tim’s Search Tips As you go
through the research process it’s helpful to keep a list of search words.
These will be handy as you use various search engines, databases,
library catalogs, book indexes, etc. The advanced search feature
in some library databases allows for more precise searching. Boolean operators (AND, OR, NOT) can be used
to connect search words. Use AND when you want both
terms to appear. Use OR for synonyms
(adolescents OR teenagers). Use NOT to exclude words (students NOT
elementary). Truncation means
using a wildcard symbol in order to find various forms of a word. For example: teen*
will retrieve teens, teenage, teenager,
teenagers. Use quotation marks to keep words together as a phrase (“right to
bear arms”) Using
advanced search to limit to specific
fields (such as subject, article title, publication title, abstract, full
text) can produce more precise results. Selecting sources § Does your
assignment require certain types
of sources? § Do you
need very current information? If
so, use periodicals and/or the Web. § Do you
need extensive information? If so,
use books. § In
general it’s good to have a variety of
sources (books, periodicals, web, etc.). § Make sure
you have sources that are appropriate for college-level research. § Make sure
all your sources are credible. § Does the
library website have a Research Guide
related to your topic? § Ask a librarian for advice on the best
sources for your topic. SCC
Library www.scc.spokane.edu/?library reference@scc.spokane.edu 533-8821 |