SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  48
“Information literacy is a survival
skill in the Information Age” (ALA, 1989).
INFORMATION LITERACY
Definition: Information Literacy is the set of skills needed
  to find, retrieve, analyze, and use information
  (ACRL, 2012).

  “Ultimately, information literate people are those who have
  learned how to learn. They know how to learn because they
  know how knowledge is organized, how to find
  information, and how to use information in such a way that
  others can learn from them. They are people prepared for
  lifelong learning, because they can always find the information
  needed for any task or decision at hand” (ACRL, 2000).
OUTLINE

How is Information Organized?
Using Library Resources
Research Skills
Evaluating Academic & Popular Sources
Citation & Academic Integrity
THE ORGANIZATION OF INFORMATION
   Students need to acquire the ability to find, evaluate, and use information
 From a young age people learn how to categorize information as a benefit
  to information processing.
 Your understanding of how knowledge can be thought of as bodies of
  information, organized from broad areas to more specific blocks of
  information, will be most useful as you think about choosing, narrowing
  and focusing research topics.
   Practical application of this knowledge relates to:
     Locating databases (A literature database will be under the “English” heading)
     Books are grouped on the shelves, LCCS gathers books on similar topics
      together
 Information can be categorized and analyzed based on who produces it,
  who the audience is, whether it is scholarly or popular in nature, the
  format it is in, the type of information and more
                                               (Jefferson Community College, 2012)
SOURCES: DO THEY MATTER?


Academic sources: Pass through peer review
  process. Authoritative and sourced. Objective and
  written for academics. Carry more „weight‟.
Popular sources are often related to general interest
  and do not require writers to provide research to
  support their stories.
EXAMPLES OF SOURCES
ACADEMIC                       POPULAR
SOURCES                        SOURCES
                                Newspaper Articles
Academic Journals
  Periodicals                  Magazine Articles
                                Trade Magazines
Academic Books
                                Organizational Profiles
  Edited Books
  Anthologies                  Media Reports
  Conference Proceedings       Reports from Other
                                Organizations
  Encyclopedias/Dictionarie
  s                             Websites (usually)
Published Reports              Grey Literature
                                  Institutional Reports
                                  Brochures
                                  Press Releases
INFORMATION LITERACY:
     STEPS TO SUCCESSFUL RESEARCH

 Step 1: Defining a topic and planning for research
 Step 2: Information seeking strategies
 Step 3: Critical evaluation of information sources
 Step 4: Reading, examining, taking notes on sources
 Step 5: Citing sources & constructing reference list
RESEARCH SKILLS
  Step 1: Defining a topic and planning for research
 Interpret the research question/assignment, define the information need
     Look for command words
         Directing words that tell you what to do. i.e. Evaluate, discuss, comment, critique,
          analyze
     Identify the assignment topic
         Area of discussion for the assignment. Take the command word and ask “what?”
          after it. I.e. Evaluate “what”?
  Develop a focus (select a specific topic)
     Area of the topic/assignment you will concentrate on.
     In other words, evaluate what, in relation to “what”?
  Take your focus and develop a thesis statement


           Example: Discuss the impact of rising tuition costs on higher
           education
INFORMATION LITERACY:
     STEPS TO SUCCESSFUL RESEARCH

 Step 1: Defining a topic and planning for research
 Step 2: Information seeking strategies
 Step 3: Critical evaluation of information sources
 Step 4: Reading, examining, taking notes on sources
 Step 5: Citing sources & constructing reference list
FINDING RESOURCES


   “More than 31% of all respondents use Internet
 search engines to find answers to their questions.
 However, people who use Internet search engines
express frustration because they estimate that half
of their searches are unsuccessful” (OCLC, 2002).
USING LIBRARY RESOURCES
 Library Catalogue
   Find books, e-books, reserves, videos/DVDs, request items from other
    campuses, place items on hold, mobile friendly.
 OCtopus (library search engine)
 Research Databases
   Organized by subject, search databases for journal articles, e-books, & more
 Electronic Journals Listing
   Search for specific journal and search within the title
 Research & Course Guides
   Created by librarians for students in specific classes or working in certain
    subject areas
 Reference sources
   Dictionaries, encyclopedias, directories found online or in campus reference
    collections
 Print Journals (Level 3)
RESEARCH SKILLS
       Step 2: Information seeking strategies
      Design your search strategy
         Develop a question (brainstorming, concept-mapping)
         Identify key words and synonyms Investigative tools
          (research guides, other libraries)
           Identify central concepts
      Locate and gather relevant resources
          Identify key databases, catalogue, reference works, etc.
           Coverage, disciplines, time periods, publication types, doc
             types
          Search expressions & Boolean operators (AND, OR, NOT)
           Broaden or narrow your research question

Rising tuition costs will negatively impact higher education
because the disparity between students who can and who
cannot afford an education will have broader
consequences for Canadian society.
CREATING A SEARCH: BOOLEAN OPERATORS
Functio   Search Strategy                                   Definition
n
Narrow    AND                                               Retrieves only records that
                                                            contain both words
          NOT                                               Eliminates material you don't
                                                            want. Careful to not lose valuable
                                                            info.
Broade    OR                                                Retrieves matches for either
n                                                           term, more records. Use with
                                                            terms with the same meaning.
          Wildcard                                          To search variations of a word.
           Colo?r                                          Use 1 or more symbols within a
           Global (w5) Warming                             word to replace 1 or more letters
          Truncation                                         Use a symbol at the end of a
           Using opera* to search                           word to replace any number of
             for operations = opera, operant, operable, etc. letters
Combin    Nesting                                           Combine AND and OR in a single
e          NO: media AND politics OR election              search. Divide your terms into
            retrieves records that match "media that also   units like an equation.
            match politics" OR retrieves records that
            match "election.“
           YES: media AND (politics OR election)
            retrieves records that match media that also
NOT
     AND                OR




                                           Nesting
Truncation



             (University of Idaho, 2012)
RESEARCH SKILLS
 Keyword searching: typically retrieve more information with less
  precision
    Good for broad or unknown topic areas
 Field searching: typically retrieves less information with more
  precision
    Good when looking for few results or source son specific topics
    Includes subject searches, title searches, etc.
 Too much information?
    Examine irrelevant records in search results
    Where did your search term match in search results? (Subject, title, etc.)
    Use limiters (Boolean, field searching, database limiters)
 Too little information?
    Spelling
    Eliminate long phrases or natural language
    Use alternate terms
    Try broadening your terms
MORE WAYS TO FIND ARTICLES
 Reference list and article citations, bibliographies
     Examine the reference lists of resources identified as being
      useful, and find other similar resources.
 Subject headings in databases & catalogue
     Terms used to describe resources, controlled vocabulary, assigned by
      indexers
 Known authors
     Search for other items by same author(s)
 Books or resources on similar topics
     In-person or virtual „shelf browsing‟
 Searching journals directly
     More direct and focused than databases
OXFORD ENGLISH DICTIONARY
 Available in print (REF PE 1625 .O86) & Online:
  FIND  ARTICLES, or HOMEPAGE  ARTICLES
  Select subject from drop-down menu, or choose a database by
  title
  Click title for more information, or CONNECT to access the
  resource
 Quick & Advanced search: Field and full-text searching
 Historical Thesaurus: Allows browsing by topic
LIBRARY CATALOGUE

 Great starting point!
 Use subject headings, call number browsing,
  author searches,
 Limit by location
 Request and renew items
LIBRARY DATABASES: ENGLISH
   MLA International Bibliography
   Literature Resource Center
   Oxford Reference Online Premium
   Project Muse
   JSTOR
   Ebrary
   Academic Search Premier
   OCtopus
REFERENCE SOURCES
 Oxford English Dictionary
 Encyclopedias (print & online)
 Choose reference as a limiter in e-resources listing
      Examples: Encyclopedia of Canada‟s
       Peoples, Encyclopedia of Evolution, Encyclopedia of
       Human Rights, Encyclopedia of Sociology, Encyclopedia
       of World Cultures
 Search library catalogue
USING LIBRARY RESOURCES: GET HELP
 Library reference desks
  Hours vary, phone, email, or in-person
  Citation assistance, research help
 AskAway
  Online, live chat reference service
  Open longer hours than library ; Manned by librarians
   from post-secondary institutions across BC
  Chat boxes on website & within databases
 E-mail
  Response received within 24 hours Sept – April, typically
   daily throughout summer
INFORMATION LITERACY:
     STEPS TO SUCCESSFUL RESEARCH

 Step 1: Defining a topic and planning for research
 Step 2: Information seeking strategies
 Step 3: Critical evaluation of information sources
 Step 4: Reading, examining, taking notes on sources
 Step 5: Citing sources & constructing reference list
EXAMPLE EVALUATIONS
http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/1344132
SOURCES: TRUE OR FALSE?


 Wikipedia is considered an academic
  source.
              False

 A book found in an academic library (i.e.
  college, university) is an academic
  source.
               False
RESEARCH SKILLS

 Step 3: Critical evaluation of information
  sources
 Critically evaluate information
 Criteria and methods of evaluating information
  resources
     Comprehensiveness, relevance, author, purpose
      and audience, accuracy and currency, objectivity
      In academia we are looking for sources that are
      reliable, accurate, objective, and up-to-date.
ACADEMIC SOURCE CHARACTERISTICS
 Who wrote it? What are the authors‟ qualifications?
    Academic authors are likely to come from a university or institute.
 Is there a sponsor, owner, funding agency?
    *important for online sources*
 Are sources listed?
    Reference list, bibliography, citations
 Has the item or writing been peer-reviewed?
    Editorial board or committee list, or provided instructions
 Who is the targeted audience?
    Style of writing, advertising, jargon
 Is the writing objective?
    Free from bias, blatantly one-sided
 Who is the publisher?
    Academic writing is often published by a university press.
 What is the appearance?
    Glossy pages, advertisements, graphs, images, photos.
EXAMPLES OF SOURCES
ACADEMIC                       POPULAR
SOURCES                        SOURCES
                                Newspaper Articles
Academic Journals
  Periodicals                  Magazine Articles
                                Trade Magazines
Academic Books
                                Organizational Profiles
  Edited Books
  Anthologies                  Media Reports
  Conference Proceedings       Reports from Other
                                Organizations
  Encyclopedias/Dictionarie
  s                             Websites (usually)
Published Reports              Grey Literature
                                  Institutional Reports
                                  Brochures
                                  Press Releases
PERIODICALS

 JOURNAL                    MAGAZINE
 Academic,                    General audience
  professional,
                               Easy reading
  technical audience
 May use jargon
                               Many advertisements
 In-depth articles            Broad coverage, not
                                usually in-depth
 Thorough reference
  list                         Rarely peer-reviewed
 Minimal advertising
 Peer-reviewed
EVALUATING: REPUTABLE SOURCES
Print sources                            Online Sources
Reliable: Sources that check their       Reliable: Sources that check their
facts: footnotes, list of references,    facts: Footnotes, references, other
other evidence of research               research evidence
Accurate & Objective: Quality            Accurate & Objective: Quality
control, editor, editorial board, peer   Control, Evidence of peer review,
review                                   author identified
                                         Look for: Extravagant claims, URL (.com vs.
                                         .org), funding agencies
Up-to-date sources: What could           Up-to-date sources: Copyright date
have changed about this topic since      or indication when page was last
publication                              updated



In academia we are looking for sources that are
 reliable, accurate, objective, and up-to-date.
PRIMARY & SECONDARY SOURCES
  PRIMARY                                      SECONDARY
  SOURCES                                      SOURCES
 Original & direct                    Draw from primary sources
  evidence                             Use evidence from primary
                                        sources
 First hand experience                May comment on primary
 Historical documents,                 sources
  interviews, raw                      Use primary sources to
  experimentY S O U R C E S
               data                     construct argument
  TERTIAR
                                       Books or articles that
 Compile, index, or organize           provide analysis, critique, or
 Sources may have analyzed or digest   a synthesis from a range of
  secondary sources                     sources
 Abstracts, bibliographies, handbooks.
  Encyclopedias, indexes, catalogues.

   Cage, K. (2011). Identifying academic sources. Massey University. Retrieved July 9, 2012 from
                     http://owll.massey.ac.nz/academic-writing/identifying-academic-sources.php
INFORMATION LITERACY:
     STEPS TO SUCCESSFUL RESEARCH

 Step 1: Defining a topic and planning for research
 Step 2: Information seeking strategies
 Step 3: Critical evaluation of information sources
 Step 4: Reading, examining, taking notes on
  sources
 Step 5: Citing sources & constructing reference list
RESEARCH SKILLS
  Step 4: Reading, examining, taking notes on sources
 Interpret and synthesize information
     Examine information source, identify source type
 Look at context, methods, results, discussion, etc.
     Think critically: ask questions, examine the context (who
      did the research, what are the research questions),
      research methods used, results, conclusions
     Verify accuracy
 Use and communicate information
 Write objectively (supported by findings, free from influence),
  concise, formal (formatting according to style)
INFORMATION LITERACY:
     STEPS TO SUCCESSFUL RESEARCH

 Step 1: Defining a topic and planning for research
 Step 2: Information seeking strategies
 Step 3: Critical evaluation of information sources
 Step 4: Reading, examining, taking notes on sources
 Step 5: Citing sources & constructing reference
  list
WHY DO WE CITE?
“Scholarly communication is the entire set of activities that
   ensure that research and new knowledge can be made
   known” (DeFelice, 2009).
                       Citations demonstrate how you
                        developed your argument and ideas
                        from the ideas of others
                       Citations give credit where credit is
                        due
                       Citations give the reader of your work a
                        path to the sources you used, so
                        they can investigate those sources if
                        interested
                                                            (Mohanty et al., 2009)
Publication (Registration
Creation           and Certification)              Dissemination
 Manuscript & IP                    Editor

                                                   Academic
                     Publisher                      Library
                                    Peer
                                  Reviewers




                                        Reformulation
ACADEMIC INTEGRITY

If you don’t acknowledge other people’s work, words or
              ideas you commit plagiarism

“Penalties for plagiarism serve both to educate students about
standards of scholarship and to deter deception and poor
scholarly practices. Penalties will reflect the seriousness of the
offence; including whether the offence was intentional or
unintentional and whether it was a first or a repeat offence”
(Okanagan College, 2010, Penalties section, para. 1 ).


Okanagan College Academic Offenses regulations and
                    policies
WHAT DO WE CITE?
 Direct quotes
 Paraphrases
 Words or terminology specific to or unique to the
  author’s research, theories, or ideas
 Use of an author's argument or line of thinking
 Historical, statistical, or scientific facts
 Graphs, drawings, etc.
 Articles or studies you refer to in your work


                                     (Mohanty et al., 2009)
BUILDING BLOCKS OF CITATIONS

What is it?
•   Journal article
•   Book
•   Report            Building blocks?
                      •   Author(s)
What format?          •   Publication date
•   Print             •   Title
•   Electronic        •   Publication information
                      •   Format-specific details
                          (i.e. page numbers, doi)
HOW DO WE CITE?
   In text citations: citations given in the body of the article,
   essay, paper, or assignment.

   Example:
          (Morgan & Hunt, 1994)
          Morgan and Hunt (1994) noted that….
          (Morgan and Hunt 50)
          (Morgan and Hunt (50) noted that….)

   Reference list citations: “provides the information necessary to
   identify and retrieve each source” (APA, 2009, p. 180).
Morgan, R. M., & Hunt, S. D. (1994). The commitment-trust theory of relationship
       marketing. Journal of Marketing, 58, 20–38. doi: 10.1504/IJMDM.2008.016041
Morgan and Hunt. “The Commitment-trust Theory of Relationship Marketing.”
       Journal of Marketing 58.1 (1994): 20-38. Project Muse. Web. 9 July 2012.
RESEARCH SKILLS
 Step 5: Citing Sources & Reference Lists
 Identify elements of citation you will need for each item
 Cite your sources as you go!
     Try a numerical system for in-text citations
     Write key author names with notes
 Compile list of database citations as a working
  document throughout research process
 Formatting rules provided style guides
 Reference list, works cited list, versus bibliography
 Do not trust MS Word or auto-formatting
CITING SOURCES IN ALL STYLES
 Reference List vs. Bibliography vs. Works Cited vs.
  ?
 Reference list (aka. Works cited in MLA): Complete list of all sources cited
 directly in your work.
 Bibliography: All sources used, whether directly cited or not. May include
 sources used to generate ideas or gain general knowledge.
      Some reference styles will ask for a bibliography in place of a reference
       list, some styles will call it a reference list while others may called it a
       works cited list. Some instructors may use the term bibliography to mean a
       reference list, always check if you are unsure.
 Annotated Bibliography: Includes a list of sources as well
  as a summary evaluation of each source‟s content and
  purpose (approx. 100-250 words) (Cage, 2012).
WHAT IS APA?

    APA = American Psychological Association
The Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association is a
style manual that provides guidance and standards in:
          • research ethics
          • the publication process
          • article format and presentation
          • AND
HOW DO WE CITE?
     Refer to APA resources to determine citation style.
  Publication Manual of the American Psychological
  Association
  6th ed., second printing
   Available at all OC Library campuses; Call no. BF 76.7 .P83 2009
  OC Library APA style guide webpage
   PDF and HTML versions of most common APA
     examples
  Links to other APA resources

Important: The APA manual is the definitive source of APA
citation information. If a resource contradicts the manual –
                       use the manual.
WHAT IS MLA?

       MLA = Modern Languages Association
The Publication Manual of Modern Languages Association
is a style manual that provides guidance and standards in:
            • research ethics
            • the publication process
            • article format and presentation
            • AND
HOW DO WE CITE?
       Refer to MLA resources to determine citation style.
    MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, 7th ed.
     Available at all OC Library campuses; Call no. LB 2369 .G53 2009



    OC Library MLA style guide
     PDF and HTML versions of most common MLA
      examples
     Links to other MLA resources

Important: The MLA Handbook is the definitive source of MLA
 citation information. If a resource contradicts the handbook–
                        use the handbook.
APA VS. MLA
               A PA                                             MLA
 Double-space and format entries with            Double-space and format entries with a
  a hanging indent                                 hanging indent
Capitalize only the first letter of the first   Capitalize the first, the last and all significant
word in the title and subtitle. Capitalize       words of a title and subtitle. Omit initial A, An
proper names. Capitalize all significant         or The and subtitles for journals, magazines
words of a journal title                         and newspapers
Italicize journal titles and volume             Italicize titles of larger sources like books or
numbers. Do not italicize issue numbers.         journals; use “ “ around titles of sources like
Italicize book and report titles                 essays or articles which are within larger
Use only the initial(s) of the author’s         sources
given name, not the full name, reverse           Reverse the author’s name for alphabetizing
all authors' names                               but otherwise give the author’s name as it
 Arrange reference list entries in              appears in the source
  alphabetical order by the surname of            Alphabetize entries by the author’s last
  the first author or by title if there is no      name or, if there is no author, by the title
  author                                           ignoring initial A, An or The or the
For online journal articles retrieved from        equivalent in another language
a database, include the DOI or a link to         For online journal articles retrieved from a
the journal homepage if no DOI available         database include the name of the database
                                                 and the word 'web'
REMEMBER
 Give credit where credit is due
 Consult OC Library Citation Style guides
 Consult Publication Manual for Your Style
 If you are unable to identify a specific example, use an
  example that is most like your source
 OC Library Research Writing & Citing guide
 Ask!
REFERENCES
American Library Association. (1989). Presidential Committee on Information Literacy: Final Report. Retrieved
   July 9, 2012 from http://www.ala.org/acrl/publications/whitepapers/presidential
Association of College and Research Libraries. (2009). ACRL scholarly communication 101: Starting with the
    basics [PowerPoint]. Retrieved from
    http://www.acrl.org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/issues/scholcomm/docs/SC%20101%20Introduction.ppt
Association of College and Research Libraries. (2012). Introduction to Information Literacy.
    http://www.ala.org/acrl/issues/infolit/overview/intro
Association of College and Research Libraries. (2000). Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher
    Education. http://www.ala.org/acrl/standards/informationliteracycompetency
American Psychological Association. (2009). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association.
   Washington, DC: Author.
Cage, K. (2012). Reference list vs. bibliography. Retrieved July 9, 2012 from
    http://owll.massey.ac.nz/referencing/reference-list-vs-bibliography.php
Jefferson Community College, 2012). Information literacy tutorial. Retrieved July 9, 2012 from
     http://sunyjefferson.libguides.com/content.php?pid=127609&sid=1095964
Mohanty , S., Orphanides, A., Rumble, J., Roberts, D., Norberg, L., Vassiliadis, K. (2009). University libraries'
   citing information tutorial. Retrieved from http://www.lib.unc.edu /instruct/citations/introduction/
OCLC. (2002). How Academic Librarians Can Influence Students’ Web-Based Information Choices. OCLC White
   Paper on the Information Habits of College Students. Retrieved from
   http://www5.oclc.org.ezproxy.okanagan.bc.ca/downloads/community/informationhabits.pdf
Okanagan College. (2010). Academic offenses. Retrieved from http://webapps1.okanagan.bc.ca/ok/calendar
   /Calendar.aspx?page=AcademicOffenses
University of Alberta. Information literacy at the University of Alberta. Retrieved July 9, 2012 from
    http://www.psych.ualberta.ca/~ITL/InfoLit%20v.2.0/index.html
University of Idaho. (2012). Information Literacy Portal: Module 3. Retrieved July 9, 2012 from
    http://www.webs.uidaho.edu/info_literacy/modules/module3/3_6.htm

Contenu connexe

Tendances

Academic libraries overview
Academic libraries overviewAcademic libraries overview
Academic libraries overviewjtsox78
 
Database searching b&h
Database searching   b&hDatabase searching   b&h
Database searching b&hwendy0315
 
Literature Search Importance & Techniques
Literature Search   Importance & TechniquesLiterature Search   Importance & Techniques
Literature Search Importance & TechniquesDr. Rupak Chakravarty
 
Using the library for research
Using the library for researchUsing the library for research
Using the library for researchRoddy MacLeod
 
Information retrieval for research, Autumn 2014
Information retrieval for research, Autumn 2014Information retrieval for research, Autumn 2014
Information retrieval for research, Autumn 2014Gina Bay
 
LIS 703 Subject Analysis by Malgorzata Kot
LIS 703 Subject Analysis by Malgorzata KotLIS 703 Subject Analysis by Malgorzata Kot
LIS 703 Subject Analysis by Malgorzata KotMalgorzataKot
 
Subject analysis
Subject analysisSubject analysis
Subject analysisJohan Koren
 
Arlington high school sixties spring 2015
Arlington high school   sixties spring 2015Arlington high school   sixties spring 2015
Arlington high school sixties spring 2015k-baril
 
Subject Headings & Classification, or, Why librarians don't seem to think lik...
Subject Headings & Classification, or, Why librarians don't seem to think lik...Subject Headings & Classification, or, Why librarians don't seem to think lik...
Subject Headings & Classification, or, Why librarians don't seem to think lik...Naomi Young
 
Research Sources and Techniques
Research Sources and TechniquesResearch Sources and Techniques
Research Sources and TechniquesGina Singh
 
Honors English - Surface
Honors English - SurfaceHonors English - Surface
Honors English - SurfaceJenny Donley
 
Intl190 guide (Feeley) 2020
Intl190 guide (Feeley) 2020Intl190 guide (Feeley) 2020
Intl190 guide (Feeley) 2020Annelise Sklar
 
Library Resources for EN4271
Library Resources for EN4271Library Resources for EN4271
Library Resources for EN4271NUS Libraries
 
Should libraries discontinue using and maintaining controlled subject vocabul...
Should libraries discontinue using and maintaining controlled subject vocabul...Should libraries discontinue using and maintaining controlled subject vocabul...
Should libraries discontinue using and maintaining controlled subject vocabul...Ryan Scicluna
 
Literature search techniques
Literature search techniquesLiterature search techniques
Literature search techniquesAhmed Elfaitury
 

Tendances (20)

Academic libraries overview
Academic libraries overviewAcademic libraries overview
Academic libraries overview
 
English 1102 2018
English 1102 2018English 1102 2018
English 1102 2018
 
Database searching b&h
Database searching   b&hDatabase searching   b&h
Database searching b&h
 
Literature Search Importance & Techniques
Literature Search   Importance & TechniquesLiterature Search   Importance & Techniques
Literature Search Importance & Techniques
 
Planning your literature search
Planning your literature searchPlanning your literature search
Planning your literature search
 
Using the library for research
Using the library for researchUsing the library for research
Using the library for research
 
Information retrieval for research, Autumn 2014
Information retrieval for research, Autumn 2014Information retrieval for research, Autumn 2014
Information retrieval for research, Autumn 2014
 
LIS 703 Subject Analysis by Malgorzata Kot
LIS 703 Subject Analysis by Malgorzata KotLIS 703 Subject Analysis by Malgorzata Kot
LIS 703 Subject Analysis by Malgorzata Kot
 
Subject analysis
Subject analysisSubject analysis
Subject analysis
 
Arlington high school sixties spring 2015
Arlington high school   sixties spring 2015Arlington high school   sixties spring 2015
Arlington high school sixties spring 2015
 
Subject Headings & Classification, or, Why librarians don't seem to think lik...
Subject Headings & Classification, or, Why librarians don't seem to think lik...Subject Headings & Classification, or, Why librarians don't seem to think lik...
Subject Headings & Classification, or, Why librarians don't seem to think lik...
 
Research Sources and Techniques
Research Sources and TechniquesResearch Sources and Techniques
Research Sources and Techniques
 
PsycInfo from ProQuest
PsycInfo from ProQuestPsycInfo from ProQuest
PsycInfo from ProQuest
 
Honors English - Surface
Honors English - SurfaceHonors English - Surface
Honors English - Surface
 
Intl190 guide (Feeley) 2020
Intl190 guide (Feeley) 2020Intl190 guide (Feeley) 2020
Intl190 guide (Feeley) 2020
 
ramamrita
ramamrita ramamrita
ramamrita
 
INTL 190 Libguide
INTL 190 LibguideINTL 190 Libguide
INTL 190 Libguide
 
Library Resources for EN4271
Library Resources for EN4271Library Resources for EN4271
Library Resources for EN4271
 
Should libraries discontinue using and maintaining controlled subject vocabul...
Should libraries discontinue using and maintaining controlled subject vocabul...Should libraries discontinue using and maintaining controlled subject vocabul...
Should libraries discontinue using and maintaining controlled subject vocabul...
 
Literature search techniques
Literature search techniquesLiterature search techniques
Literature search techniques
 

Similaire à Information literacy is a survival skill

This presentation is not about RefWorks
This presentation is not about RefWorksThis presentation is not about RefWorks
This presentation is not about RefWorkssrosenblatt
 
PSYC 3401
PSYC 3401PSYC 3401
PSYC 3401Traciwm
 
Buley Library Research Basics
Buley Library Research BasicsBuley Library Research Basics
Buley Library Research BasicsWinnie Shyam
 
9.11.11 final tools for learning searching literature
9.11.11 final tools for learning searching literature9.11.11 final tools for learning searching literature
9.11.11 final tools for learning searching literaturePaula Nottingham
 
4 how to_search_traditional_academic_databases
4 how to_search_traditional_academic_databases4 how to_search_traditional_academic_databases
4 how to_search_traditional_academic_databaseskeithstanger
 
Updated tools for learning searching literature2
Updated tools for learning searching literature2Updated tools for learning searching literature2
Updated tools for learning searching literature2Paula Nottingham
 
Library Resources and the Literature Review
Library Resources and the Literature ReviewLibrary Resources and the Literature Review
Library Resources and the Literature Reviewjthiessen
 
Literature review strategies for graduate students
Literature review strategies for graduate studentsLiterature review strategies for graduate students
Literature review strategies for graduate studentsElizabeth Yates
 
W13 libr250 databases___sources1
W13 libr250 databases___sources1W13 libr250 databases___sources1
W13 libr250 databases___sources1lterrones
 
Ws mc manus_pt2
Ws mc manus_pt2Ws mc manus_pt2
Ws mc manus_pt2k-kobiela
 
WsMcManusPt2
WsMcManusPt2WsMcManusPt2
WsMcManusPt2k-kobiela
 
Academic writing workshop series 1 2016 seminar 2 lit reviews
Academic writing workshop series 1 2016 seminar 2 lit reviewsAcademic writing workshop series 1 2016 seminar 2 lit reviews
Academic writing workshop series 1 2016 seminar 2 lit reviewsZulfiqar Ali
 
The Literature and Study Review and Ethical Concern
The Literature and Study  Review and Ethical ConcernThe Literature and Study  Review and Ethical Concern
The Literature and Study Review and Ethical ConcernJo Balucanag - Bitonio
 
Information Skills For Researchers V3
Information Skills For Researchers V3Information Skills For Researchers V3
Information Skills For Researchers V3Jacqueline Thomas
 

Similaire à Information literacy is a survival skill (20)

SOC 111 (Fall 2012)
SOC 111 (Fall 2012)SOC 111 (Fall 2012)
SOC 111 (Fall 2012)
 
Business research lec5
Business research lec5Business research lec5
Business research lec5
 
This presentation is not about RefWorks
This presentation is not about RefWorksThis presentation is not about RefWorks
This presentation is not about RefWorks
 
PSYC 3401
PSYC 3401PSYC 3401
PSYC 3401
 
Using search tools
Using search toolsUsing search tools
Using search tools
 
Buley Library Research Basics
Buley Library Research BasicsBuley Library Research Basics
Buley Library Research Basics
 
9.11.11 final tools for learning searching literature
9.11.11 final tools for learning searching literature9.11.11 final tools for learning searching literature
9.11.11 final tools for learning searching literature
 
4 how to_search_traditional_academic_databases
4 how to_search_traditional_academic_databases4 how to_search_traditional_academic_databases
4 how to_search_traditional_academic_databases
 
Updated tools for learning searching literature2
Updated tools for learning searching literature2Updated tools for learning searching literature2
Updated tools for learning searching literature2
 
Library Resources and the Literature Review
Library Resources and the Literature ReviewLibrary Resources and the Literature Review
Library Resources and the Literature Review
 
Literature review strategies for graduate students
Literature review strategies for graduate studentsLiterature review strategies for graduate students
Literature review strategies for graduate students
 
W13 libr250 databases___sources1
W13 libr250 databases___sources1W13 libr250 databases___sources1
W13 libr250 databases___sources1
 
Ws mc manus_pt2
Ws mc manus_pt2Ws mc manus_pt2
Ws mc manus_pt2
 
WsMcManusPt2
WsMcManusPt2WsMcManusPt2
WsMcManusPt2
 
Academic writing workshop series 1 2016 seminar 2 lit reviews
Academic writing workshop series 1 2016 seminar 2 lit reviewsAcademic writing workshop series 1 2016 seminar 2 lit reviews
Academic writing workshop series 1 2016 seminar 2 lit reviews
 
Chem 2500 Spr13- Nagel
Chem 2500 Spr13- NagelChem 2500 Spr13- Nagel
Chem 2500 Spr13- Nagel
 
McNair scholars
McNair scholarsMcNair scholars
McNair scholars
 
The Literature and Study Review and Ethical Concern
The Literature and Study  Review and Ethical ConcernThe Literature and Study  Review and Ethical Concern
The Literature and Study Review and Ethical Concern
 
Information Skills For Researchers V3
Information Skills For Researchers V3Information Skills For Researchers V3
Information Skills For Researchers V3
 
Literature searching tips and tricks
Literature searching tips and tricksLiterature searching tips and tricks
Literature searching tips and tricks
 

Plus de Okanagan College Library (12)

Open Research Data
Open Research DataOpen Research Data
Open Research Data
 
History 110: Survey of Ancient World
History 110: Survey of Ancient World History 110: Survey of Ancient World
History 110: Survey of Ancient World
 
BUAD123: Management Principles, Fall 2012
BUAD123: Management Principles, Fall 2012BUAD123: Management Principles, Fall 2012
BUAD123: Management Principles, Fall 2012
 
The citation struggle: Seeing the forest for the trees
The citation struggle: Seeing the forest for the treesThe citation struggle: Seeing the forest for the trees
The citation struggle: Seeing the forest for the trees
 
Cite It Right: CMNS 122 Winter 2012
Cite It Right: CMNS 122 Winter 2012Cite It Right: CMNS 122 Winter 2012
Cite It Right: CMNS 122 Winter 2012
 
Cite it Right: ESLW05
Cite it Right: ESLW05Cite it Right: ESLW05
Cite it Right: ESLW05
 
Psyc111: Searching PsycINFO, PubMed, & APA Citation
Psyc111: Searching PsycINFO, PubMed, & APA CitationPsyc111: Searching PsycINFO, PubMed, & APA Citation
Psyc111: Searching PsycINFO, PubMed, & APA Citation
 
Cite It Right! (advanced)
Cite It Right! (advanced)Cite It Right! (advanced)
Cite It Right! (advanced)
 
Snakes and Ladders
Snakes and LaddersSnakes and Ladders
Snakes and Ladders
 
Connections with OC: PD Workshop
Connections with OC: PD WorkshopConnections with OC: PD Workshop
Connections with OC: PD Workshop
 
Research & Citation: Comm122 133
Research & Citation: Comm122 133Research & Citation: Comm122 133
Research & Citation: Comm122 133
 
Cite it Right!
Cite it Right! Cite it Right!
Cite it Right!
 

Dernier

How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERPHow to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERPCeline George
 
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4MiaBumagat1
 
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptxKarra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptxAshokKarra1
 
How to Add Barcode on PDF Report in Odoo 17
How to Add Barcode on PDF Report in Odoo 17How to Add Barcode on PDF Report in Odoo 17
How to Add Barcode on PDF Report in Odoo 17Celine George
 
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptxmary850239
 
THEORIES OF ORGANIZATION-PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
THEORIES OF ORGANIZATION-PUBLIC ADMINISTRATIONTHEORIES OF ORGANIZATION-PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
THEORIES OF ORGANIZATION-PUBLIC ADMINISTRATIONHumphrey A Beña
 
Student Profile Sample - We help schools to connect the data they have, with ...
Student Profile Sample - We help schools to connect the data they have, with ...Student Profile Sample - We help schools to connect the data they have, with ...
Student Profile Sample - We help schools to connect the data they have, with ...Seán Kennedy
 
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptxBarangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptxCarlos105
 
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdf
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdfICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdf
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdfVanessa Camilleri
 
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translation
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translationActivity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translation
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translationRosabel UA
 
AUDIENCE THEORY -CULTIVATION THEORY - GERBNER.pptx
AUDIENCE THEORY -CULTIVATION THEORY -  GERBNER.pptxAUDIENCE THEORY -CULTIVATION THEORY -  GERBNER.pptx
AUDIENCE THEORY -CULTIVATION THEORY - GERBNER.pptxiammrhaywood
 
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)Mark Reed
 
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptxmary850239
 
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...JojoEDelaCruz
 
Transaction Management in Database Management System
Transaction Management in Database Management SystemTransaction Management in Database Management System
Transaction Management in Database Management SystemChristalin Nelson
 
Choosing the Right CBSE School A Comprehensive Guide for Parents
Choosing the Right CBSE School A Comprehensive Guide for ParentsChoosing the Right CBSE School A Comprehensive Guide for Parents
Choosing the Right CBSE School A Comprehensive Guide for Parentsnavabharathschool99
 
Global Lehigh Strategic Initiatives (without descriptions)
Global Lehigh Strategic Initiatives (without descriptions)Global Lehigh Strategic Initiatives (without descriptions)
Global Lehigh Strategic Initiatives (without descriptions)cama23
 
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice greatEarth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice greatYousafMalik24
 

Dernier (20)

FINALS_OF_LEFT_ON_C'N_EL_DORADO_2024.pptx
FINALS_OF_LEFT_ON_C'N_EL_DORADO_2024.pptxFINALS_OF_LEFT_ON_C'N_EL_DORADO_2024.pptx
FINALS_OF_LEFT_ON_C'N_EL_DORADO_2024.pptx
 
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERPHow to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
 
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
 
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptxKarra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
 
How to Add Barcode on PDF Report in Odoo 17
How to Add Barcode on PDF Report in Odoo 17How to Add Barcode on PDF Report in Odoo 17
How to Add Barcode on PDF Report in Odoo 17
 
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
 
THEORIES OF ORGANIZATION-PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
THEORIES OF ORGANIZATION-PUBLIC ADMINISTRATIONTHEORIES OF ORGANIZATION-PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
THEORIES OF ORGANIZATION-PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
 
LEFT_ON_C'N_ PRELIMS_EL_DORADO_2024.pptx
LEFT_ON_C'N_ PRELIMS_EL_DORADO_2024.pptxLEFT_ON_C'N_ PRELIMS_EL_DORADO_2024.pptx
LEFT_ON_C'N_ PRELIMS_EL_DORADO_2024.pptx
 
Student Profile Sample - We help schools to connect the data they have, with ...
Student Profile Sample - We help schools to connect the data they have, with ...Student Profile Sample - We help schools to connect the data they have, with ...
Student Profile Sample - We help schools to connect the data they have, with ...
 
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptxBarangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
 
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdf
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdfICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdf
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdf
 
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translation
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translationActivity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translation
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translation
 
AUDIENCE THEORY -CULTIVATION THEORY - GERBNER.pptx
AUDIENCE THEORY -CULTIVATION THEORY -  GERBNER.pptxAUDIENCE THEORY -CULTIVATION THEORY -  GERBNER.pptx
AUDIENCE THEORY -CULTIVATION THEORY - GERBNER.pptx
 
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)
Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)
 
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx
 
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...
 
Transaction Management in Database Management System
Transaction Management in Database Management SystemTransaction Management in Database Management System
Transaction Management in Database Management System
 
Choosing the Right CBSE School A Comprehensive Guide for Parents
Choosing the Right CBSE School A Comprehensive Guide for ParentsChoosing the Right CBSE School A Comprehensive Guide for Parents
Choosing the Right CBSE School A Comprehensive Guide for Parents
 
Global Lehigh Strategic Initiatives (without descriptions)
Global Lehigh Strategic Initiatives (without descriptions)Global Lehigh Strategic Initiatives (without descriptions)
Global Lehigh Strategic Initiatives (without descriptions)
 
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice greatEarth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
 

Information literacy is a survival skill

  • 1. “Information literacy is a survival skill in the Information Age” (ALA, 1989).
  • 2. INFORMATION LITERACY Definition: Information Literacy is the set of skills needed to find, retrieve, analyze, and use information (ACRL, 2012). “Ultimately, information literate people are those who have learned how to learn. They know how to learn because they know how knowledge is organized, how to find information, and how to use information in such a way that others can learn from them. They are people prepared for lifelong learning, because they can always find the information needed for any task or decision at hand” (ACRL, 2000).
  • 3. OUTLINE How is Information Organized? Using Library Resources Research Skills Evaluating Academic & Popular Sources Citation & Academic Integrity
  • 4. THE ORGANIZATION OF INFORMATION Students need to acquire the ability to find, evaluate, and use information  From a young age people learn how to categorize information as a benefit to information processing.  Your understanding of how knowledge can be thought of as bodies of information, organized from broad areas to more specific blocks of information, will be most useful as you think about choosing, narrowing and focusing research topics.  Practical application of this knowledge relates to:  Locating databases (A literature database will be under the “English” heading)  Books are grouped on the shelves, LCCS gathers books on similar topics together  Information can be categorized and analyzed based on who produces it, who the audience is, whether it is scholarly or popular in nature, the format it is in, the type of information and more (Jefferson Community College, 2012)
  • 5. SOURCES: DO THEY MATTER? Academic sources: Pass through peer review process. Authoritative and sourced. Objective and written for academics. Carry more „weight‟. Popular sources are often related to general interest and do not require writers to provide research to support their stories.
  • 6. EXAMPLES OF SOURCES ACADEMIC POPULAR SOURCES SOURCES Newspaper Articles Academic Journals Periodicals Magazine Articles Trade Magazines Academic Books Organizational Profiles Edited Books Anthologies Media Reports Conference Proceedings Reports from Other Organizations Encyclopedias/Dictionarie s Websites (usually) Published Reports Grey Literature Institutional Reports Brochures Press Releases
  • 7. INFORMATION LITERACY: STEPS TO SUCCESSFUL RESEARCH  Step 1: Defining a topic and planning for research  Step 2: Information seeking strategies  Step 3: Critical evaluation of information sources  Step 4: Reading, examining, taking notes on sources  Step 5: Citing sources & constructing reference list
  • 8. RESEARCH SKILLS  Step 1: Defining a topic and planning for research  Interpret the research question/assignment, define the information need  Look for command words  Directing words that tell you what to do. i.e. Evaluate, discuss, comment, critique, analyze  Identify the assignment topic  Area of discussion for the assignment. Take the command word and ask “what?” after it. I.e. Evaluate “what”?  Develop a focus (select a specific topic)  Area of the topic/assignment you will concentrate on.  In other words, evaluate what, in relation to “what”?  Take your focus and develop a thesis statement Example: Discuss the impact of rising tuition costs on higher education
  • 9. INFORMATION LITERACY: STEPS TO SUCCESSFUL RESEARCH  Step 1: Defining a topic and planning for research  Step 2: Information seeking strategies  Step 3: Critical evaluation of information sources  Step 4: Reading, examining, taking notes on sources  Step 5: Citing sources & constructing reference list
  • 10. FINDING RESOURCES “More than 31% of all respondents use Internet search engines to find answers to their questions. However, people who use Internet search engines express frustration because they estimate that half of their searches are unsuccessful” (OCLC, 2002).
  • 11. USING LIBRARY RESOURCES  Library Catalogue  Find books, e-books, reserves, videos/DVDs, request items from other campuses, place items on hold, mobile friendly.  OCtopus (library search engine)  Research Databases  Organized by subject, search databases for journal articles, e-books, & more  Electronic Journals Listing  Search for specific journal and search within the title  Research & Course Guides  Created by librarians for students in specific classes or working in certain subject areas  Reference sources  Dictionaries, encyclopedias, directories found online or in campus reference collections  Print Journals (Level 3)
  • 12. RESEARCH SKILLS  Step 2: Information seeking strategies  Design your search strategy  Develop a question (brainstorming, concept-mapping)  Identify key words and synonyms Investigative tools (research guides, other libraries)  Identify central concepts  Locate and gather relevant resources  Identify key databases, catalogue, reference works, etc.  Coverage, disciplines, time periods, publication types, doc types  Search expressions & Boolean operators (AND, OR, NOT)  Broaden or narrow your research question Rising tuition costs will negatively impact higher education because the disparity between students who can and who cannot afford an education will have broader consequences for Canadian society.
  • 13. CREATING A SEARCH: BOOLEAN OPERATORS Functio Search Strategy Definition n Narrow AND Retrieves only records that contain both words NOT Eliminates material you don't want. Careful to not lose valuable info. Broade OR Retrieves matches for either n term, more records. Use with terms with the same meaning. Wildcard To search variations of a word.  Colo?r Use 1 or more symbols within a  Global (w5) Warming word to replace 1 or more letters Truncation Use a symbol at the end of a  Using opera* to search word to replace any number of for operations = opera, operant, operable, etc. letters Combin Nesting Combine AND and OR in a single e  NO: media AND politics OR election search. Divide your terms into retrieves records that match "media that also units like an equation. match politics" OR retrieves records that match "election.“  YES: media AND (politics OR election) retrieves records that match media that also
  • 14. NOT AND OR Nesting Truncation (University of Idaho, 2012)
  • 15. RESEARCH SKILLS  Keyword searching: typically retrieve more information with less precision Good for broad or unknown topic areas  Field searching: typically retrieves less information with more precision Good when looking for few results or source son specific topics Includes subject searches, title searches, etc.  Too much information? Examine irrelevant records in search results Where did your search term match in search results? (Subject, title, etc.) Use limiters (Boolean, field searching, database limiters)  Too little information? Spelling Eliminate long phrases or natural language Use alternate terms Try broadening your terms
  • 16. MORE WAYS TO FIND ARTICLES  Reference list and article citations, bibliographies  Examine the reference lists of resources identified as being useful, and find other similar resources.  Subject headings in databases & catalogue  Terms used to describe resources, controlled vocabulary, assigned by indexers  Known authors  Search for other items by same author(s)  Books or resources on similar topics  In-person or virtual „shelf browsing‟  Searching journals directly  More direct and focused than databases
  • 17. OXFORD ENGLISH DICTIONARY  Available in print (REF PE 1625 .O86) & Online:  FIND  ARTICLES, or HOMEPAGE  ARTICLES  Select subject from drop-down menu, or choose a database by title  Click title for more information, or CONNECT to access the resource  Quick & Advanced search: Field and full-text searching  Historical Thesaurus: Allows browsing by topic
  • 18. LIBRARY CATALOGUE  Great starting point!  Use subject headings, call number browsing, author searches,  Limit by location  Request and renew items
  • 19. LIBRARY DATABASES: ENGLISH  MLA International Bibliography  Literature Resource Center  Oxford Reference Online Premium  Project Muse  JSTOR  Ebrary  Academic Search Premier  OCtopus
  • 20. REFERENCE SOURCES  Oxford English Dictionary  Encyclopedias (print & online) Choose reference as a limiter in e-resources listing  Examples: Encyclopedia of Canada‟s Peoples, Encyclopedia of Evolution, Encyclopedia of Human Rights, Encyclopedia of Sociology, Encyclopedia of World Cultures Search library catalogue
  • 21. USING LIBRARY RESOURCES: GET HELP  Library reference desks  Hours vary, phone, email, or in-person  Citation assistance, research help  AskAway  Online, live chat reference service  Open longer hours than library ; Manned by librarians from post-secondary institutions across BC  Chat boxes on website & within databases  E-mail  Response received within 24 hours Sept – April, typically daily throughout summer
  • 22. INFORMATION LITERACY: STEPS TO SUCCESSFUL RESEARCH  Step 1: Defining a topic and planning for research  Step 2: Information seeking strategies  Step 3: Critical evaluation of information sources  Step 4: Reading, examining, taking notes on sources  Step 5: Citing sources & constructing reference list
  • 24. SOURCES: TRUE OR FALSE?  Wikipedia is considered an academic source.  False  A book found in an academic library (i.e. college, university) is an academic source.  False
  • 25. RESEARCH SKILLS Step 3: Critical evaluation of information sources  Critically evaluate information  Criteria and methods of evaluating information resources  Comprehensiveness, relevance, author, purpose and audience, accuracy and currency, objectivity In academia we are looking for sources that are reliable, accurate, objective, and up-to-date.
  • 26. ACADEMIC SOURCE CHARACTERISTICS  Who wrote it? What are the authors‟ qualifications?  Academic authors are likely to come from a university or institute.  Is there a sponsor, owner, funding agency?  *important for online sources*  Are sources listed?  Reference list, bibliography, citations  Has the item or writing been peer-reviewed?  Editorial board or committee list, or provided instructions  Who is the targeted audience?  Style of writing, advertising, jargon  Is the writing objective?  Free from bias, blatantly one-sided  Who is the publisher?  Academic writing is often published by a university press.  What is the appearance?  Glossy pages, advertisements, graphs, images, photos.
  • 27. EXAMPLES OF SOURCES ACADEMIC POPULAR SOURCES SOURCES Newspaper Articles Academic Journals Periodicals Magazine Articles Trade Magazines Academic Books Organizational Profiles Edited Books Anthologies Media Reports Conference Proceedings Reports from Other Organizations Encyclopedias/Dictionarie s Websites (usually) Published Reports Grey Literature Institutional Reports Brochures Press Releases
  • 28. PERIODICALS JOURNAL MAGAZINE  Academic,  General audience professional,  Easy reading technical audience  May use jargon  Many advertisements  In-depth articles  Broad coverage, not usually in-depth  Thorough reference list  Rarely peer-reviewed  Minimal advertising  Peer-reviewed
  • 29. EVALUATING: REPUTABLE SOURCES Print sources Online Sources Reliable: Sources that check their Reliable: Sources that check their facts: footnotes, list of references, facts: Footnotes, references, other other evidence of research research evidence Accurate & Objective: Quality Accurate & Objective: Quality control, editor, editorial board, peer Control, Evidence of peer review, review author identified Look for: Extravagant claims, URL (.com vs. .org), funding agencies Up-to-date sources: What could Up-to-date sources: Copyright date have changed about this topic since or indication when page was last publication updated In academia we are looking for sources that are reliable, accurate, objective, and up-to-date.
  • 30. PRIMARY & SECONDARY SOURCES PRIMARY SECONDARY SOURCES SOURCES  Original & direct  Draw from primary sources evidence  Use evidence from primary sources  First hand experience  May comment on primary  Historical documents, sources interviews, raw  Use primary sources to experimentY S O U R C E S data construct argument TERTIAR  Books or articles that  Compile, index, or organize provide analysis, critique, or  Sources may have analyzed or digest a synthesis from a range of secondary sources sources  Abstracts, bibliographies, handbooks. Encyclopedias, indexes, catalogues. Cage, K. (2011). Identifying academic sources. Massey University. Retrieved July 9, 2012 from http://owll.massey.ac.nz/academic-writing/identifying-academic-sources.php
  • 31. INFORMATION LITERACY: STEPS TO SUCCESSFUL RESEARCH  Step 1: Defining a topic and planning for research  Step 2: Information seeking strategies  Step 3: Critical evaluation of information sources  Step 4: Reading, examining, taking notes on sources  Step 5: Citing sources & constructing reference list
  • 32. RESEARCH SKILLS  Step 4: Reading, examining, taking notes on sources  Interpret and synthesize information  Examine information source, identify source type  Look at context, methods, results, discussion, etc.  Think critically: ask questions, examine the context (who did the research, what are the research questions), research methods used, results, conclusions  Verify accuracy  Use and communicate information  Write objectively (supported by findings, free from influence), concise, formal (formatting according to style)
  • 33. INFORMATION LITERACY: STEPS TO SUCCESSFUL RESEARCH  Step 1: Defining a topic and planning for research  Step 2: Information seeking strategies  Step 3: Critical evaluation of information sources  Step 4: Reading, examining, taking notes on sources  Step 5: Citing sources & constructing reference list
  • 34. WHY DO WE CITE? “Scholarly communication is the entire set of activities that ensure that research and new knowledge can be made known” (DeFelice, 2009).  Citations demonstrate how you developed your argument and ideas from the ideas of others  Citations give credit where credit is due  Citations give the reader of your work a path to the sources you used, so they can investigate those sources if interested (Mohanty et al., 2009)
  • 35. Publication (Registration Creation and Certification) Dissemination Manuscript & IP Editor Academic Publisher Library Peer Reviewers Reformulation
  • 36. ACADEMIC INTEGRITY If you don’t acknowledge other people’s work, words or ideas you commit plagiarism “Penalties for plagiarism serve both to educate students about standards of scholarship and to deter deception and poor scholarly practices. Penalties will reflect the seriousness of the offence; including whether the offence was intentional or unintentional and whether it was a first or a repeat offence” (Okanagan College, 2010, Penalties section, para. 1 ). Okanagan College Academic Offenses regulations and policies
  • 37. WHAT DO WE CITE?  Direct quotes  Paraphrases  Words or terminology specific to or unique to the author’s research, theories, or ideas  Use of an author's argument or line of thinking  Historical, statistical, or scientific facts  Graphs, drawings, etc.  Articles or studies you refer to in your work (Mohanty et al., 2009)
  • 38. BUILDING BLOCKS OF CITATIONS What is it? • Journal article • Book • Report Building blocks? • Author(s) What format? • Publication date • Print • Title • Electronic • Publication information • Format-specific details (i.e. page numbers, doi)
  • 39. HOW DO WE CITE? In text citations: citations given in the body of the article, essay, paper, or assignment. Example: (Morgan & Hunt, 1994) Morgan and Hunt (1994) noted that…. (Morgan and Hunt 50) (Morgan and Hunt (50) noted that….) Reference list citations: “provides the information necessary to identify and retrieve each source” (APA, 2009, p. 180). Morgan, R. M., & Hunt, S. D. (1994). The commitment-trust theory of relationship marketing. Journal of Marketing, 58, 20–38. doi: 10.1504/IJMDM.2008.016041 Morgan and Hunt. “The Commitment-trust Theory of Relationship Marketing.” Journal of Marketing 58.1 (1994): 20-38. Project Muse. Web. 9 July 2012.
  • 40. RESEARCH SKILLS Step 5: Citing Sources & Reference Lists  Identify elements of citation you will need for each item  Cite your sources as you go!  Try a numerical system for in-text citations  Write key author names with notes  Compile list of database citations as a working document throughout research process  Formatting rules provided style guides  Reference list, works cited list, versus bibliography  Do not trust MS Word or auto-formatting
  • 41. CITING SOURCES IN ALL STYLES  Reference List vs. Bibliography vs. Works Cited vs. ?  Reference list (aka. Works cited in MLA): Complete list of all sources cited directly in your work.  Bibliography: All sources used, whether directly cited or not. May include sources used to generate ideas or gain general knowledge.  Some reference styles will ask for a bibliography in place of a reference list, some styles will call it a reference list while others may called it a works cited list. Some instructors may use the term bibliography to mean a reference list, always check if you are unsure.  Annotated Bibliography: Includes a list of sources as well as a summary evaluation of each source‟s content and purpose (approx. 100-250 words) (Cage, 2012).
  • 42. WHAT IS APA? APA = American Psychological Association The Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association is a style manual that provides guidance and standards in: • research ethics • the publication process • article format and presentation • AND
  • 43. HOW DO WE CITE? Refer to APA resources to determine citation style. Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association 6th ed., second printing  Available at all OC Library campuses; Call no. BF 76.7 .P83 2009 OC Library APA style guide webpage  PDF and HTML versions of most common APA examples Links to other APA resources Important: The APA manual is the definitive source of APA citation information. If a resource contradicts the manual – use the manual.
  • 44. WHAT IS MLA? MLA = Modern Languages Association The Publication Manual of Modern Languages Association is a style manual that provides guidance and standards in: • research ethics • the publication process • article format and presentation • AND
  • 45. HOW DO WE CITE? Refer to MLA resources to determine citation style. MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, 7th ed.  Available at all OC Library campuses; Call no. LB 2369 .G53 2009 OC Library MLA style guide  PDF and HTML versions of most common MLA examples  Links to other MLA resources Important: The MLA Handbook is the definitive source of MLA citation information. If a resource contradicts the handbook– use the handbook.
  • 46. APA VS. MLA A PA MLA  Double-space and format entries with  Double-space and format entries with a a hanging indent hanging indent Capitalize only the first letter of the first Capitalize the first, the last and all significant word in the title and subtitle. Capitalize words of a title and subtitle. Omit initial A, An proper names. Capitalize all significant or The and subtitles for journals, magazines words of a journal title and newspapers Italicize journal titles and volume Italicize titles of larger sources like books or numbers. Do not italicize issue numbers. journals; use “ “ around titles of sources like Italicize book and report titles essays or articles which are within larger Use only the initial(s) of the author’s sources given name, not the full name, reverse Reverse the author’s name for alphabetizing all authors' names but otherwise give the author’s name as it  Arrange reference list entries in appears in the source alphabetical order by the surname of  Alphabetize entries by the author’s last the first author or by title if there is no name or, if there is no author, by the title author ignoring initial A, An or The or the For online journal articles retrieved from equivalent in another language a database, include the DOI or a link to For online journal articles retrieved from a the journal homepage if no DOI available database include the name of the database and the word 'web'
  • 47. REMEMBER  Give credit where credit is due  Consult OC Library Citation Style guides  Consult Publication Manual for Your Style  If you are unable to identify a specific example, use an example that is most like your source  OC Library Research Writing & Citing guide  Ask!
  • 48. REFERENCES American Library Association. (1989). Presidential Committee on Information Literacy: Final Report. Retrieved July 9, 2012 from http://www.ala.org/acrl/publications/whitepapers/presidential Association of College and Research Libraries. (2009). ACRL scholarly communication 101: Starting with the basics [PowerPoint]. Retrieved from http://www.acrl.org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/issues/scholcomm/docs/SC%20101%20Introduction.ppt Association of College and Research Libraries. (2012). Introduction to Information Literacy. http://www.ala.org/acrl/issues/infolit/overview/intro Association of College and Research Libraries. (2000). Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education. http://www.ala.org/acrl/standards/informationliteracycompetency American Psychological Association. (2009). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association. Washington, DC: Author. Cage, K. (2012). Reference list vs. bibliography. Retrieved July 9, 2012 from http://owll.massey.ac.nz/referencing/reference-list-vs-bibliography.php Jefferson Community College, 2012). Information literacy tutorial. Retrieved July 9, 2012 from http://sunyjefferson.libguides.com/content.php?pid=127609&sid=1095964 Mohanty , S., Orphanides, A., Rumble, J., Roberts, D., Norberg, L., Vassiliadis, K. (2009). University libraries' citing information tutorial. Retrieved from http://www.lib.unc.edu /instruct/citations/introduction/ OCLC. (2002). How Academic Librarians Can Influence Students’ Web-Based Information Choices. OCLC White Paper on the Information Habits of College Students. Retrieved from http://www5.oclc.org.ezproxy.okanagan.bc.ca/downloads/community/informationhabits.pdf Okanagan College. (2010). Academic offenses. Retrieved from http://webapps1.okanagan.bc.ca/ok/calendar /Calendar.aspx?page=AcademicOffenses University of Alberta. Information literacy at the University of Alberta. Retrieved July 9, 2012 from http://www.psych.ualberta.ca/~ITL/InfoLit%20v.2.0/index.html University of Idaho. (2012). Information Literacy Portal: Module 3. Retrieved July 9, 2012 from http://www.webs.uidaho.edu/info_literacy/modules/module3/3_6.htm

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. Why is it important? Information overload, data smog– too much information can create a barrier in our livesAn IL student is able to: Determine the extent of information neededAccess the needed information effectively and efficientlyEvaluate information and its sources criticallyIncorporate selected information into one’s knowledge baseUse information effectively to accomplish a specific purposeUnderstand the economic, legal, and social issues surrounding the use of information, and access and use information ethically and legally
  2. How does information fit into knowledge? Concept and how relates to everyday experiencesYou are looking for the text of a speech by a politician to clarify his or her position on an issue, you heard about it on the news but want more information. Where can you find the words of the speech? Where can you find the audio? Where can you find other people writing about the politician’s political stance?This requires knowledge of information types, where to find information in different formats (databases), and reviews and articles by different authors
  3. Academic source: Demonstrate that the information you are using has been researched and is information is supported by evidence. Authoritative: identify the qualifications and expertise of the writer. Sourced: credits the origins of information and ideas via reference list or bibliography. Peer-reviewed: other academic or experts in the field have read the source and checked for accuracy, often a panel of referees (journals), or editors (books). Objective: look at topics fairly, does not ignore alternative positions, even if does take a side. Written for academics: target audience usually researchers, students, lecturers, professionals.
  4. Define the information need
  5. Step 1: Planning for research, topic definition, and information types and sourcesExample: Discuss the impact of rising tuition costs on higher education (discus what?)Discus what? Rising tuition, in relation to? Higher education
  6. How are you going to answer your information need?
  7. Survey of college students across the US.
  8. Design search: rising tuition, higher education, disparity or inequality, impact, society, CanadaLocate: education databases, business databases, sociology databases. Cross disciplinary, maybe OCtopus? Library catalogue
  9. Who is the sponsor, owner, finding agency? Just because a person’s name is on a site does not mean they wrote the information on the site and does not mean they truly exist
  10. Academic sources consider multiple sources of information to get to the big picture. Relying on evidence, logic, research. That is why outside sources are normally considered more valuable. You still want to present your own position and ideas, but your position should be supported by evidence from other sources. Reflective writing may emphasize personal experience, it depends on the assignment. Printed sources: books and articlesQuality over quantity
  11. Information ethics
  12. Traditional system of scholarly communication….Standing on the shoulders of giants….Intellectual property
  13. Plagiarism is very bad, it is not only using other people’s work and passing it off as your own, but it is also poor scholarly practice. Whether intentional or unintentional, you can still be penalized.
  14. A good rule of thumb is to ask yourself if a knowledgeable reader would be familiar with the information in question. If he or she would have to look it up to confirm it, you should usually document it. If you're not sure, cite it to play it safe.Example: What would you need to cite? Today it is 10 degrees in Kelowna or the Sky is blue.APA advises: “Cite the work of those individuals whose ideas, theories, or research have directly influenced your work. They may provide key background information, support of dispute your thesis, or offer critical definitions and data. Citation of an article implies that you have personally read the cited work. In addition….provide documentation for all facts and figures that are not common knowledge” (p. 169).APA says don’t have to cite common knowledge, but what is that? Can depend on the research you are doing and your reader audience, so always better to cite.Don’t have to cite your own ideas of course, but other people do, even if a close friend!
  15. So, these are going to be your building blocks or your checklist when building citations.These apply to all citations you do.With this in mind, we are going to dive into our first example…SHOW EDITED BOOK, SHOW CHAPTER IN EDITED BOOK– explain slight difference if e-book, but for the most part the same, but you can check the manual. Get students to identify what we will be citing
  16. The rules are what are important, the examples are just that, examples
  17. Do not trust MS Word or auto-formatting- OK starting point for extracting elements of citation
  18. So what is it?We have to let people know where we got our information from, in case they want to go back to it for more detail, in case they want to check your resources, etc.
  19. This is what the manual looks likeIt’s always available behind the reference desk, or you can check it out. The manual trumps everything, the handout is based on the manual and doesn’t have every example in it
  20. So what is it?We have to let people know where we got our information from, in case they want to go back to it for more detail, in case they want to check your resources, etc.
  21. This is what the manual looks likeIt’s always available behind the reference desk, or you can check it out. The manual trumps everything, the handout is based on the manual and doesn’t have every example in it
  22. We are here to help, ask any time, stop by our offices