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REA 830: Advanced Children's and Young Adult Literature

General Search Tips

1. Learn about database filtering tools and options

Each database offers slightly different tools and options to help you focus your search. You may be able to filter the results by date range, document type/format, specific journals, etc. Many databases allow you to continue adding to and revising your search filters within the results, which can be very helpful!

2. Play around with words and phrases:

  • Generate a list of keywords and phrases, including synonyms, and try different words, or combinations of words, to get new and different results!
  • Pay attention to the words scholars are using to talk about the topic in the titles and abstracts of the articles you have already found. Try including those words in your searches.

 

3. Try using some advanced searching techniques

  • Put a phrase in “quotation marks” to search for that exact phrase. This means fewer, more focused results!
  • Use wildcards by typing the * in place of one or more letters. For example librar* searches for any of the words: library, libraries, librarians, librarians, librarianship
  • Use Boolean operators

Graham, Rebecca. "Boolean Searching" YouTube, uploaded July 2019.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FyhASqTjFPw

4. Change up where you search

Every database has different content - they aren't all the same! Try plugging your search terms into a different general or discipline-specific database to see what you find. If you aren't sure which of our online resources to use, contact John Garrison for help!

 

5. Go beyond the search bar

  • Check out the bibliography/works cited section of your most helpful source. Search for those titles in WISE
  • Check out other articles/books that have cited your most helpful source. Search Google Scholar for the title of your source and click the "cited by" linkGoogle scholar search with Cited by link (below title and summary) highlighted
  • Use the suggested index terms - you can either add these to your keyword list or in some databases, you can click on the index terms to explore other articles about that topic.
  • Find other articles/books by the same author - academics typically write multiple things about their special focus/topic of interest.
  • Look at the other articles in the same journal issue - sometimes issues have a theme and all/most of the articles are related.

Evaluating Sources

Remember the CRAAP test from your first-year Inquiry class?

C - Currency: How recent was a source created/researched? Do you need items from a particular time period?

R - Relevance: Does the information in the source meet your needs? Is it the right type of source for your assignment?

A - Authority: What are the author’s credentials and expertise related to the topic?

A - Accuracy:

  • How does the source use data or craft arguments?
  • How do they back up their claims?
  • Are there factual inaccuracies?

P - Purpose: What is the intent of the author or sponsoring organization?

Taking good notes

There are many ways to take notes - and taking notes is very important - but here is one suggested format you can use.

A downloadable copy of the Word Template for this note format is provided below. You can hand-write your notes, but typing them into the template will make it easy to copy and paste your quotes when you need them later on.

Reading Notes

Before you read

MLA Citation of source

Context

What is the author’s purpose in writing this article?

What part of my research question does this article address?

While you read

Page number

  • Quote 
    • Detailed notes
    • Detailed notes
      • Questions requiring further research
      • Other articles cited that I should read

Page number

  • Quote 
    • Detailed notes
    • Detailed notes
      • Questions requiring further research
      • Other articles cited that I should read

After you read

Short summary of the article:

Author’s main points:

  •  
  •  
  •  

New evidence/arguments:

Questions I still have:

Did this article address my research question the way I expected?

Relationship to other articles I’ve read:

Putting Ideas into Practice

  • Reflect daily and take good notes on what worked and didn't work!
  • Find classmates or colleagues from the area to collaborate and talk with
  • Stay organized- try tools like Evernote, Google Drive, or Workflowy
  • Share your experience with others using social media or a blog!