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Reminders to Get Your Students on the Right
Path
- Inform/remind students that online research
takes
time! In fact, online research provides so many choices that
it may
actually take longer to conduct the research.
Time
also needs to be factored in for:
- finding the books,
- finding a photocopier,
- finding change, etc.
- Believe it or not, we still have students coming in the night before
their
paper/project is due! If you're not already doing so, consider
establishing
deadlines for turning in bibliographies, for turning rough drafts, etc.
Utilize the Library
Research Planner approach to better demonstrate that there is a
process.
- Many books get checked out this time of year on the same topics. Be
sure
students are checking out their books as early as possible. In some
cases, it
is helpful to use the Vigo County
Public
Library as a back-up (link is also kept on Library home page under
Other
Libraries).
- Come prepared! If you are coming to the Library to do your
research, you will not be able to access your campus network account, so
bring
a floppy disc to download LUIS records, full-text articles, etc. There
are
even times when you may need paper and pens, so bring them, too! Bring
change
for the photocopiers, or, better yet, be sure you have credit added to
your
Sycamore ID cards and save time and money!
- Print is not dead! Besides books,
there
are times when students will be using other library resources, including
indexes, non-print materials, microfilmed newspaper or journal articles,
etc.
- The Internet is not the same as
"Internet-based
resources"; e.g., a database like ProQuest is not 'the
Internet'. Some students have been told not to use the
Internet for
their research, and, therefore, think that they can't use the materials
listed
under Databases --> Subject or
Databases --> Alphabetical.
Articles in the full-text databases are identical to the print copies,
and are
paid for by Library subscriptions.
- An Internet Search Engine such as Altavista or Hotbot
will
not link you to full-text articles found in our full-text databases.
- Online access: the Library has an estimated 285
databases/parts of
databases available. Full-text access is estimated at 11,000 periodical
titles
(scattered throughout the database listings)! Use the E-Journal
link to find out what is available. (The Library still subscribes to
approximately 4,000
print periodicals.)
- Access to journal article citations in most subject areas are
now
available electronically, but depth of coverage differs a lot! (For
example,
lots of social sciences, business, humanities, but currently, not
so
much in the pure sciences).
- Besides finding articles in full-text databases, students will still
need
to check for local periodical holdings. Citation databases, as did
printed
indexes, always index more titles than are held locally. Some students
think,
if it's in the index, it's in the Library. Emphasize that the student
should
search for the magazine/journal title, not the article title, when
conducting
a Journal Title search in LUIS Online Catalog.
- Be sure students know where our Online Help Guides are: helpdx.html
- Be sure students know that they can/should ask for advice, either in
person at any Help Desk
(Info
Desk -- 237-2580, Current Periodicals, Government Documents, Teaching
Materials), or via our Get
Help links.
- Students can take advantage of the Interlibrary
Loan
electronic form link on the home page, but they have to allow at least
7-14
working days for their requests to be processed, and there is not 100%
guarantee that we will be able to obtain the materials. If the research
process begins earlier in the semester, then students will have an
opportunity
to take advantage of this service.
- Government
Documents are organized in a different classification system from
the rest
of the Library. Staff at the Government Documents Desk will help
students find
Gov Docs materials, in print or on microfiche, or will direct students
to a
federal web site as appropriate.
For
Faculty
It may be too late this semester, but, if your students are continually
confused/unprepared for a library research experience, or the quality of
their
papers doesn't reflect the anticipated level of scholarship, consider
discussing
various avenues of support by the Office
of
Library Instruction, including
- pre-assessment of student's library/internet skills,
- assessing/updating your assignment parameters -- doing a quality
check. A recent example: Gov Docs got a question about a specific
geology
book with photos of sand dunes. The book was not in the Online Catalog,
and the manual
"post-index" (check-in) card listed it as missing since 1994. If you
want
students to use Reference books, list the books they should consult. If
you
list specific items, give complete bibliographic information. If you
want all
students to examine a source, put it on Course Reserve (for
general
collection); Info Desk Reserve for Reference books, etc. Consider
Electronic
Course
Reserve!
- scheduling classroom/lab instruction
- identifying Internet-based guides & links
- librarian assistance in your Blackboard, etc. web-based
instruction
Information
for
Teaching Faculty
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