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NURS 3351 Research Strategies and Library Resources Traci Welch Moritz Public Services Librarian/Assistant Professor Heterick Memorial Library

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Page 1: NURS 3351

NURS 3351Research

Strategies and Library Resources

Traci Welch MoritzPublic Services Librarian/Assistant Professor

Heterick Memorial Library

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WELCOME to the LIBRARY

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What you can expect from HML

• Knowledgeable degreed librarians on duty over 60 hours per week

• Friendly faces ready to help 101.5 hours per week

• Access to the resources you need both on and off campus

• Resources available in a timely manner

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OhioLINK

POLAR

WorldCAT

Ca. 400,000items

Ca. 15,000,000items

1.4 billionitems

What we expect you to know

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+ even more!

• 250 Databases• 550 print periodical subscriptions• Ca. 20,000 online journals• Audiovisuals – physical and

streaming

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How am I suppose to remember all this stuff?

04/10/2023 add footer here (go to view menu and choose header) 6

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Nature & Extent of Info. Needed

• Research ethics• Writing well• Defining research topic• Tools for research• Availability of information

Research GuidesWriting 1 for Nurses

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Research Ethics

• Plagiarism - “...the wrongful appropriation or purloining, and publication as one’s own, the ideas or the expression of the ideas (literary, artistic, musical, mechanical, etc.) of an other.” – see Heterick Help Page Also Student Code of Conduct

• Copyright - intended to promote the arts and the sciences. It does this by providing authors of original literary, dramatic, musical, artistic, and certain other intellectual works the ability to control how their work is used by others.

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Research Ethics

• In other words, to plagiarize is to copy someone else’s work without giving him/her credit.

• Plagiarism is not always intentional. You can do it by accident, but it is still against the law. If you ever have a question about whether something is plagiarized, please ask!

1

1. How not to plagiarize your report -- Shannon Hosier Mersand

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Research Ethics

• Identify any information that would not be considered common knowledge

• Unless in direct quotes, make sure you paraphrase what the original author said

• Use a quote if you can’t think of a way to paraphrase the information

• always, Always, ALWAYS cite the source of any information in your paper which is not considered common knowledge. If you are unsure if something is common knowledge, cite it!

2 How not to plagiarize your report -- Shannon Hosier Mersand

How may I avoid plagiarizing?2

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Research Ethics

Things that are found in a number of places, and are likely to be known by a large number of people.

Examples:– The sky is blue– Grass is usually green– George Washington was the 1st president of the United

States

So what is common knowledge

3 How not to plagiarize your report -- Shannon Hosier Mersand

3

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Research Ethics

Main Entry: para·phrase 1 : a restatement of a text, passage, or work giving the meaning in another form

From Merriam-Webster’s Online Dictionary http://www.m-w.com

What does paraphrase mean?

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Research Ethics

When you paraphrase something, it is different than putting it in your own words. When you put something in your own words, you are making a statement about the information you have found, rather than just restating the information. Usually there is an opinion of some sort in something “In your own words”

What does it mean to put something in my own words?

4 How not to plagiarize your report -- Shannon Hosier Mersand

4

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Research Ethics

• Main Entry: quote 1 a : to speak or write (a passage) from another usually with credit acknowledgment b : to repeat a passage from, especially in substantiation or illustration

• From Merriam-Webster’s Online Dictionary http://www.m-w.com

What is a quote?

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Research Ethics

• A citation is how you indicate where your information came from.

• There are four citation styles that are in frequent use at the college level. They are:

• MLA (Modern Language Association)• APA (American Psychological Association)• CMS (Chicago Manual of Style)• Turabian (Kate Turabian's A Manual for Writers of Term Papers,

Theses, and Dissertations, 6th ed., 1996 )• Each style has a way to do in-text citations, a way to do a

bibliography, and a way to do footnotes and endnotes. • Always confirm with each instructor the style required.• You need to learn how to do citations, etc., but there is a citation

software management tool available to all ONU students, faculty and staff…

What is a citation?

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REFWORKS

Bibliographic Citation Software

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• Start big doing background reading

• Narrow your topic for a more focused product

• Research narrowed topic using subject specific databases

• Keep track of bibliographic citations to avoid trouble down the road.

• Refworks

Research Strategy

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Research Tools

• Catalogs – for locating books, maps, musical scores, govt. documents, etc.

• Databases – usually for locating periodical and newspaper articles, but may cover other materials as well

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• Heterick Memorial Library

• Undergraduate Library, accessible to all

• Taggert Law Library

• Library for Law school, accessible to all

Libraries at ONU

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CATALOGS• POLAR -- Accessing items

located at HML (physical and electronic) as well as Law Library

• OhioLINK -- Next Step if you can’t find what you want in the HML collection

• ILL -- option of last resort

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POLARwww.onu.edu/library

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Off Campus Access

EVAEva Maglott00021559801

Eva Maglott

Please use all digits in your student ID number.

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• Click on Search Polar at the home page of the library

Find a Book -- POLAR

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Find a Book -- POLAR

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1. Keyword Search

• Looks in several locations (usually subject, article title, abstracts or contents)

• Does not require an exact match• Generates comparatively large number of hits (not precise)

• Good if you are not familiar with terminology

Find a Book -- POLAR

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Click on Basic (keyword) TabFind a Book -- POLAR

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Find a Book -- POLAR

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Find a Book -- POLAR

E-books

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• Materials owned by all Ohio colleges, universities, several public libraries

• Link from POLAR permits you to submit requests

• Most requests arrive in 2-3 working days• No charge • Only 25 requests at a time• May keep up to 84 days

Find a Book -- OhioLINK

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Find a Book -- OhioLINK

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Find a Book -- OhioLINK

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LIBRARY TOUR

• First floor -- Circulation desk, Reference desk and collection, Computer Labs, Librarian’s offices, New books, Current Periodicals and Newspapers, Microforms Room

• The first floor is meant for action and is often not very quiet.

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LIBRARY TOUR

• Second floor – Classrooms, Communication Skills Center, older periodicals, open study tables, group study carrels, 1-2 person study carrels.

• The second floor is meant for studying and periodicals use.

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LIBRARY TOUR

• Third floor – Book collection, 1-2 person • study carrels, seating in book stacks,

lounge areas.

• This is probably the quietest part of the library.

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P:drive, Library Instruction folder, FYE folder, Handouts folder, “Critically analyzing information sources”

What about the Internet?

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Google Scholar

ONU buysFull-textdatabase

OhioLINKPermits

Google tolink to full-text

Google asksto link tocontent

ONU user sees licensed full-textarticles

Run Google ScholarSearch

Note: If working offcampus user seesonly citation to articles not full text

What about the Internet?

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Find an Article

Web Management

Be sure to click on the “Off campus access tab” to begin

Problems? Contact our Systems Librarian with:• Name of database• Error messages• [email protected]• Date/ time• Note you are working off-campus

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Find an Article

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Proquest Nursing

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Find an Article

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• What if it’s not available PDF or HTML?

• Look up the periodical title in the library catalog NOT the article title

Find an Article

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Find an Article

Pneumonia and Respiratory Failure from Swine-Origin Influenza A (H1N1) in Mexico

Rogelio Perez-padilla, Daniela De La Rosa-zamboni, Samuel Ponce De Leon, Mauricio Hernandez, et al. The New England Journal of Medicine. Boston: Aug 13, 2009. Vol. 361, Iss. 7; p. 680

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• And could be available in print

Find an Article

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• Reserve means the periodical/journal is held at the front desk.

• Current means the issue is new and is available on the open shelves beside the computer lab.

• All others are upstairs and arranged alphabetically by title.

• Bound means it’s out of the building• Arrived means it’s on the open shelves• Expected means it’s not here yet

Find an Article

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• It may have to be requested

Find an Article

ILL

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Find an Article

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• It may be available Full text from OhioLINK or another database

Find an Article

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Find an Article

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Other databasesEbscoHost products--

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EbscoHost

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EbscoHost

Health Source: Nursing/Academic EditionAcademic Search Complete

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EbscoHost

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EbscoHost

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EbscoHost

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• Often tools for locating journal and newspaper articles

• Most are subject-specific, some multi-disciplinary

• Many give access to full text of articles• Heterick has 200+• Available from Heterick home page

Databases

Find an Article

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• Over 20,000 journals indexed, most are full text

• Divided by subject area offered at ONU

• Electronic Journals

Find an Article

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• Periodical means the same as Magazine

Usually magazines are more “popular”

• JournalsScholarly or Professional

Peer reviewed

Find an Article

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Click on “Periodical Articles”

Find an Article

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Find an Article

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Other databases

• Lexis-Nexis, current events, news

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Lexis-Nexis

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Help/Instruction

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• Ask at the Front Desk• Phone the Reference Desk – 419-772-

2185 (see library page for available hours)

• Contact by E-mail [email protected]

[email protected]• Use Chat Help feature or the IM

QUESTIONS?

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