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LIBRARY
RESOURCES FOR GRADUATE RESEARCH IN EDUCATION
(EDG 7938)
PROFESSOR
LAPP
LIBRARIAN: Ken
Frankel
I. LOCATING BOOKS IN THE
LIBRARY:
FAU Library Catalog: click on "Catalog" or
"Books". The following types of basic searches are
available:
-
Search for Keyword(s):
Searches for terms anywhere they appear in the
catalog record. Search terms can be truncated
with a ? e.g. educat? will search for education,
educational, educators etc.
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Browse Organized Lists:
Use this search
when you already know an author, title or
subject heading. Some of the available options
include:
-
Author’s
Name:
last name first, you don’t need to
capitalize
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Title:
if a title
starts with “The,” “A,” or “An,” omit that
and skip to the next word
-
Subject, LC:
must be entered in a
very specific manner according the LC
Subject Headings. You may get a
cross-reference to use another term
-
If you're not finding anything with a
subject search try a keyword search instead.
- Journals/Serials:
This search lets you know if the Library has a
certain journal or magazine. However, it does
not search for articles in journals. To do this
use a database instead (see below). After
searching for a journal title, click on the
"Location" line to see which dates the Library
owns. (Note: not all electronic journals are
catalogued in the catalog. There is also a
link to a separate list of all electronic
journals available at FAU).
The Advanced search screen allows you to combine
terms using "and, or, not" as well as limiting a
search by location, date, format, or language.
II. SEARCHING FOR ARTICLES
IN DATABASES:
To search for articles click on "Indexes/Databases"
or "Articles". There are both alphabetical and
subject listings of databases. The Library provides
access to the two major education databases: ERIC
and Education Full Text. It's estimated that there
is about 60% overlap between the two, so to be
thorough, try using them both. In addition,
databases such as ProQuest Digital Dissertations,
WorldCat, Web of Science and Kraus Curriculum
Development Library (KCDL) may be accessed through
the Library's home page.
Note: when using
these databases from off-campus you must log in
through the
EZ-Proxy link. You will need to enter the
14-digit number from your Owl Card in order to do
this.
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Education Fulltext
Education
Full Text is the online version of the paper
Education Index. This database covers periodical
(magazine and journal) articles only.
Searches may be limited by full text, page
image, peer reviewed status, date, document type
or physical description. A useful feature is
“Expand” which also searches the full text of
the articles (when available), not just the
citation and abstract.
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ERIC (Education Resource Information
Center)
Eric is a
combination of two databases: Cumulative Index
to Journals in Education (CIJE) and Resources in
Education (RIE). RIE covers non-journal
education documents, such as reports, conference
papers, curriculum guides, etc. Several versions
of ERIC are listed on the database list. By
using the Advanced Search screen, you can limit
your search by document type (e.g.
guides-teaching), source, format, or date. Many
of the more recent ERIC documents can be
accessed online by clicking on the full text
link. Older ERIC documents are available on
microfiche in the Library, and are arranged by
the six digit ED number. The ERIC database is
available at FAU through two commercial vendors
and the government web site. The commercial
vendors are recommended because they allow
connection to the full text of journal articles
using SFX, which the government web site does
not (yet).
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WorldCat
The world's most comprehensive bibliographic
database, includes over 48 million records in
over 400 languages worldwide. Includes records
for books, documents, audiovisual materials,
etc. Does not include citations for journal
articles.
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ProQuest Digital Dissertations
Covers every
doctoral dissertation completed in the U.S. at
accredited institutions for the last 150 years.
It includes some master's theses and foreign
language dissertations. The full-text of most
recent (1997 to present) dissertations is
available to download.
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Web of Science
Three unique
citation databases which allow searching cited
references as well as traditional searches
independently of in combination: the Science
Citation Index Expanded, Social Sciences
Citation Index, and Arts and Humanities Citation
Index. Sort search results by "Times Cited" to
determine most influential articles.
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Kraus Curriculum Development Library Online
This searchable database of curricula,
frameworks, and standards brings together
education objectives, content, instructional
strategies, and evaluative techniques for all
subjects covered in PreK-12 and Adult Basic
Education. Searches may be limited by subject,
grade level, educational content, etc. Documents
with a page icon are available online. The other
documents are available on microfiche in the
Library (LB 1570 K72). The Library has the
microfiche for 1983-1994 and 1997-2000.
RefWorks
With RefWorks, users can
create their own personal database by importing
references from online databases. They can use
these references in writing their papers and
automatically format the paper and the
bibliography in seconds. For a
tutorial to RefWorks, see
The Bare Bones Beginner's Guide to RefWorks
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INTERLIBRARY LOAN (AKA ILLiad)
Use this service
to order materials the Boca Campus library does NOT
own. You may order books, Articles, videos, etc. Use
this service to order materials at the Jupiter or
Port St. Lucie libraries to have the materials
delivered to the Boca campus circulation desk. To
set up this free service, create an account for
"first time users"
here.
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CITING YOUR REFERENCES:
APA style is the way to format research papers based
on the Publication manual of the American
Psychological Association (Washington, DC: American
Psychological Association, 2001). This book is
available in the Reference area and on 3 hour
reserve (BF 76.7 P83 2001). Many quick reference
guides to APA & other styles are available on the
Internet. An example from Purdue University is:
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/research/r_apa.html
V. RESEARCH ASSISTANCE:
Ask A Librarian Email and chat reference help
Reference desk phone
number: 561-297-3785
Make an appointment with a
librarian:
One-on-one reference consultation
For Further assistance contact:
Ken Frankel, M.Ed, MLIS, (frankel@fau.edu),
Reference Dept. (561-297-0079)
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