Use the catalog to find books, government documents, DVDs, etc. that are in Kresge Library. Also use the catalog to see if we have access to a particular journal title (in print on 4th floor or online as an "electronic resource")--but the Catalog does NOT include/index journal articles.
Union catalog of many Michigan libraries; 1st stop to interloan books. When you search the OU catalog for a book title and discover that the library does not have it, you automatically get a link to MelCat. Then you can see if another Michigan library has it and place a request for it.
World Cat--union catalog of libraries worldwide
Eric Via CSA The standard database for resources in education (very broadly defined) including journal articles from research/scholarly and practitioner literature, as well as ERIC documents. ERIC documents include such various sources as books, research reports, government documents, conference papers, bibliographies, curricula and lesson plans, and other documents. Covers literature from 1966 through the present, with online direct full-text for ERIC documents from 1992-present. Use "Get It" links to find out if library has the journal articles.
Education Abstracts --only indexes journal articles. Most items will duplicate what is in ERIC, but you may discover some unique items.
PsycInfo PsycINFO provides access to international literature in psychology and related disciplines such as education, psychiatry, counseling, business, medicine, nursing, pharmacology, law, linguistics, and social work. It indexes journal articles, chapters in books, books, and dissertations. Useful to limit to English language. Use "Get It" links to find out if materials indexed are available at OU.
Dissertation Abstracts--selectively indexes doctoral disserations and even more selectively master's theses. Abstracts for dissertations are included from 1980 forward, for theses for 1988 forward.
Dissertations & Theses at OU--many not include all OU dissertations, but it does include many recent ones--often including full text. Can search by advisor as well as keyword search for topics.
PsycArticles--PsycARTICLES is a database of entirely full-text articles from journals published by the American Psychological Association, the APA Educational Publishing Foundation, the Canadian Psychological Association, and Hogrefe & Huber. Most of the over 70 APA journals included in PsycARTICLES now go back to volume 1, issue 1. The earliest journal is Psychological Review, which was started in 1894.
Web of Science (includes Science Citation Index and Social Sciences Citation Index) --OU has this resource from 1980 forward. There are no formal "subject headings" but standardized keywords and author keywords are assigned to each article. Once you find one relevant article, you can then find other related articles by looking at that article's references, looking at articles that cite "your" article, or looking at articles that cite similar references to those of "your" article. If there is no link to the full text of an article, Be sure to use the
links! You can search Social Sciences Citation Index only if you wish.
JSTOR--Online collection of many scholarly journals from volume 1 until 2 to 5 years ago. Full text of articles is searchable! Problem: JSTOR does not use subject headings. If you get too many results searching your terms in "full-text" try restricting them to "article title." Browse the list of education journals included to determine if this would be a useful collection to search.
Does the library have access to a journal online? Easiest way to find out is to check the "E-Journals A to Z " from the library's "Find Articles" page.
Where do you find lists of databases and other online resources available at OU? The easiest way to find these is to check "Databases by Subject" or "Databases A to Z" from the "Find Articles" page. To see a listing of the Library's education databases click on Education on the "Databases by Subject" listing.
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When you are using the library's databases, be sure to click on the blue
link when the article you want does not have a full text link in the database.
will then take you to the article from another source or, if the online article is not available, you can check the library catalog record for print holdings or, if we do not have it in print, you can request a copy of the article via interlibrary loan.
ILLIAD for Interlibrary Loan-- When you click on
links in any of the Library databases and discover OU does not have access to a journal (either in print or online), you can click on the link to "order this through interlibrary loan." This takes you to ILLIAD. You can also get to ILLIAD directly and fill out a form to request an item OU does not own.
and requires that both concepts be included in your search results
or gets "more"--use between similar terms (e.g., dogs or pets)
* (? in the Library Catalog)is a truncation symbol--gets all words that begin with the letters before the symbol. Teen* gets teens, teenager, teenagers.
" "--quotation marks around 2 or more words require that the words occur together and in that order. Use them around "united states". However, "obesity in children" could be better searched as obesity and children.
( )--use parentheses to group like terms (dogs or cats or pets)
--Sample searches:
(phd or doctora*) and (hispanic* or "mexican americans" or latino*)
(youth or adolescen* or teen*) and sleep
Millie Merz
merz@oakland.edu
248-370-2457
Print (2d floor, South end):
Online:
OU has a site wide license for The Chronicle of Higher Education
--Reference materials in Kresge Library (print sources):
Annual Register of Grant Support (includes section on funding for educational projects and research) Ref. AS 911 .A2 A67 2009
The Foundation Directory (helps identify foundations that might be interested in funding a project) Ref. AS 911 .A2 F65 2009
Step 1 —Log in to RefWorks. (If you do not have an account, first create one. Be sure that you give your OU e-mail account when you register.)
Step 2 —Export records from ERIC via CSA . Instructions for exporting.
Step 3 —Create folder/folders for your bibliographic records. (View “Organizing your references” tutorial.)
Step 4 —Put your imported references into appropriate folders. A reference can be placed in more than one folder.
Step 5 —Export references from other sources—the Library Catalog [directions are for Firefox], JSTOR, PsycInfo, and Web of Science (links take you to instructions).
Step 6 —Add references manually. Sometimes you have references that you find in books and bibliographies that you need to add “by hand.”
Step 7 —Share folders. You can share folders with your fellow students, with your professor, or with anyone. Be sure to click on “Allow users to post comments on references” when you share a folder with your instructor.
Step 8 —Save a folder shared with you to your own RefWorks account. This involves “exporting” the shared folder to your RefWorks.
Step 9 —Create a bibliography from your references.
Potential Problems
1.Pop-ups. You may have to change your pop-up settings--in Google or Yahoo toolbar, in browser settings, and/or your internet security software (e.g., Norton).
2. You may get a screen indicating that "there is a problem with this website's security certificate." Click on "continue to this website."
3. When exporting a shared folder to your RefWorks from off campus, you will need to use the access code for OU (RWOakUniv) and log into RefWorks.
One more thing! Librarians are here to help you. Click on "Ask a Librarian" on the library web site to find out many ways you can seek our assistance--including Research Consultations!
Oakland University, Kresge Library
2200 N Squirrel Rd., Rochester, MI 48309
(248) 370 - 4426