Subscription Databases
Library Catalogs
Periodicals
Research Commons
Subject Guides
Finding Your Way
About the Library
Archives
Library Home
Questions? Email us at library@danahall.org.
Last modified 12.01.09
|
Dana Hall Library >> Subject Guides >> Middle School >> SS 8 Choosing to Participate Pathfinder
SS 8: Choosing to Participate Pathfinder
Research Steps
There is no pathfinder with sources for this assignment! You have learned about different aspects of research; now you're on your own (with help from your teacher and librarians, of course) to find the sources you need. This is a guide to the steps you should take when doing your research.
Remember: Write down your sources while doing research! If you forget where you found your information, it will be very hard to find that source again! For a reminder about citations, look in your planner or Creating a Bibliography.
I: Subscription Databases and Periodicals
Your person is probably too recent for our books. Try periodicals! (Even if she is in books, she might be in periodicals, too.)
- Try a periodicals database (InfoTrac, ProQuest, New York Times Online...).
- If you get too many useless results, try searching for your person's name + "biography" (for example, "Aung San Suu Kyi biography").
- If the article you want isn't full-text, see a librarian! We might be able to help you find the article in our library.
- Check a database that seems like it might have information about your person (Access Science, American National Bibliography, CQ Historic Documents, Current Issues: Reference Shelf Plus, Issues & Controversies in American History...).
II: Websites
- While reading about your person, think about websites that might be helpful. (If she won a Nobel Prize, try the Nobel website. If she works at a university, try that school’s website.)
- Look up your person and/or topic in Wikipedia. Follow the citation links at the bottom.
- If you’ve tried all these things and still need more information, you can Google. You should have used at least two good sources from Step I or II before Googling!
III: Print Sources
- Search for your person in the Dana Hall Library Catalog.
- Search the catalog for broader categories.
- What field is the person in? (medicine, sports, writing...)
- Sometimes people made a difference by showing that members of a minority or disadvantaged group can be successful. Your person is a woman - is she also African-American, Jewish, Latina, disabled...?
- For example, typing "women sports" into the catalog will find (among other things) books about famous female athletes. If your person is an athlete, she might be in one of those books.
- Skim the sections of the shelves where the call numbers start with BC (in Non-Fiction) or REF BC (in Reference). Those are the Biography Collections; you might find a book that's useful to you there.
|