research using databases

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Page 1: Research using databases

B Y C R I S T Y M O R A N E M A I L C M O R A N 1 @ M D C . E D U

RESEARCH YOUR TOPIC

Page 2: Research using databases

RESEARCH—GETTING STARTED

1. Come up with a topic or research question

2. Identify the key words of your topic or question

3. Find background information on your topic –

reference books

4. Search library databases for information on your

topic – start broad and then narrow down

5. Advanced Search tips

6. Evaluate results

7. Read your articles and make notes of things you

want to include in your writing

Page 3: Research using databases

WHAT ARE LIBRARY DATABASES?

• Where you find and locate articles: scholarly, popular, newspaper, trade magazine, etc.

• Massive collections of research sources

• General and subject-specific collections

• Also include encyclopedias

and dictionaries, e-books,

magazines, scholarly journals, and videos.

• You can access them online

remotely and on-campus.

• You can send them to

yourself via email or save

them to your USB drive or

browse them online.

Page 4: Research using databases

DATABASES FOR ARTICLES

Go to www.mdc.edu/main/library

Page 5: Research using databases

Borrower ID is MDC Student ID #

Password: Last 4 Digits of Borrower

ID

Page 6: Research using databases

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

• First, you want to learn about your topic – get the facts!

• Use encyclopedias, dictionaries, and reference sources

• Be able to:• Define your topic and

relevant terms

• Understand why it’s worth writing about

Page 7: Research using databases

SUPPORTING INFORMATION

Once you are familiar with the facts, look up information about:

• Opposing viewpoints

• Current scholarship and research

• Emerging theories

• Statistics and data

Search Tips

• Always use Advanced Search

• Start broad—not too specific

• Add terms if results are too numerous or general

• Results usually organized by date not relevance

Page 8: Research using databases

USING ADVANCED SEARCH

• Separate topics in different search rows

• Start broad—see what’s out there first, then add terms to refine or limit your search

• Learn your Boolean operators• AND

• OR

• NOT

• Quotation marks• Wild card (asterisk) *

Page 9: Research using databases

SEARCHING WITH BOOLEAN OPERATORS

• AND – links up your search terms and tells the database to find only articles that contain all the terms you’ve linked • Example: Hemingway AND Wilde will return articles that are each about both Hemingway

and Wilde

• OR – tells the database to find articles that contain any of the terms you’ve lined with OR, not just ones that contain all your terms • Example: Hemingway OR Wilde will return articles about Hemingway and articles about

Wilde though each article will not necessarily be about both

• NOT – excludes articles that contain whichever term you do NOT want • Example: Hemingway NOT movie might help you limit your search so the results that come

back are not those about movie versions of Hemingway’s books

• Quotation marks – search exact phrases rather than individual words in a search row • Example: “English patient” will return results only where the words English and patient appear

together as a phrase

• Wildcard – opens your search to words that share a root or common element without you typing every word out • Example: child* searches for child OR child’s OR children OR childhood

Page 10: Research using databases

MAXIMIZE YOUR EFFORTS

• Preview your articles – read the abstracts, skim the

indexing for subject headings

• Determine if it is likely to contain information

relevant to your topic

• Read through your articles with a highlighter or note

pad handy

• Check the reference list/ bibliography for interesting

materials

Page 11: Research using databases

LIBRARY @ NORTH CAMPUS

Days Open Close

Monday-

Thursday

7:30

a.m.

9:00

p.m.

Friday 7:30 a.m.

5:00 p.m.

Saturday 8:00 a.m.

1:00p.m.

Sunday CLOSED

Online—Access on-campus

and off-campus

http://www.mdc.edu/main/

library

Call us (305) 237-1183

Research Guide:

http://libraryguides.mdc.edu/

resources

Building Hours

Page 12: Research using databases

HELP • Visit the Reference Desk

• Call us at (305) 237-

1183

• Chat with us using Ask a

Librarian—from your

mobile phone or

computer at home, in

the library, or elsewhere

• Sunday to Thursday:

10 a.m. to midnight

• Friday and Saturday:

10 a.m. to 5 p.m.