Week 2: Library Assignment
A.
Instructions (adapted for new UML Library website)
Objectives
- To navigate the UML Library electronic database
PsycInfo
- To create search commands using Boolean
operators
- To identify empirical articles in peer-reviewed
journals
- To request an article from Inter-Library Loan
- To become familiar with referring to an article
by Author (date)
Part 1: Logging in
- Log onto the UML Library website. You may go to the www.uml.edu and find
the Library from there
- Look at what you see. Notice that there is a large RED menu
option on the lower left: Off-Campus Users Start Here Note: New UML Library website has replaced this option
with a sidebar, Off Campus Users Login
- If you are working from anywhere other than a
University of Massachusetts on campus computer terminal, you must
click there.
- Enter your first_lastname and
UMS number Note: New website requires student
e-mail address and password.
- Proceed to Find
Articles Note: Note: New
website select (a) topic: Psychologyàselect PsycInfo on the right or (b) Articles:
Type in PsycInfo
Part 2: Finding Articles using
PsycInfo
- There are a number of ways to find articles, the
most efficient database for psychology being PsycInfo
- After clicking on Find Articles you
should select a subject. Hmmm, Psychology
would be a good one. Select
it. Note: see notes above
- Find PsycInfo and select it.
- We’ll start with an AUthor search using
yours truly. Type in au arcus
- How many hits do you find?
- Scroll down and check them out. Do you really think I would publish
something called, The long-term ombudsman program: A social work
perspective. Nope. That’s George (no relation as far as I
know).
- So, select one of the articles that Arcus,
Doreen authored by clicking on the title of any of them.
- When you are on the detailed page for that
article, you will see several categories of information, including the
abstract, a valuable but brief summary of what the article does. You will also see Author with the author’s
name(s) hyperlinked. Select Arcus,
Doreen
- Now how many hits do you get?
- Think about what you have found. All items that I have authored or
co-authored in journals or book sources that are indexed by PsycInfo. Items that have appeared in local newspapers
won’t be there. Chapters that I
wrote for The Gale Encyclopedia of Childhood and Adolescence will
not be there. Unpublished
conference presentations will not be there. On the other hand, none of those are empirical journal
articles. If you need to find any of the other items, you would have to
change databases to something like Academic Search Premier (more general)
or ERIC (resources in education) or Lexis-Nexus (news). But we won’t worry about that. What is
here is a as good representation of my published empirical work as you
will find.
Part 3: Boolean operators used here
- On to other searches. Let’s find empirical studies in peer-reviewed journals on
the topic of the influence of television on aggression in children.
- You can choose any of those terms and type them
in. Begin with aggression. As of the date I am typing this
assignment, you should get about 26,248 hits.
- Look them over.
Some are books, some dissertations, some chapters in books. We want articles in Peer Reviewed
Journals. Find that tab and
select it. Today you would get
18,732 articles.
- Let’s limit it.
Try typing in the two other terms (children, television) as
well and see what you get. How
many hits did you get? Zero?? If so it is because the search engine
looked for the exact phrase you typed (aggression children
television).
- Add the Boolean operator AND. Type AND in between each search
term. Now how many hits did you
get?
- Select the Peer Reviewed Journal tab. How
many articles come up?
- Now we are in business—almost. Limit the articles you have found by
selecting the blue tab Refine Search.
- Scroll down to Methodology and select Empirical
Study and re-select Search. (If you choose reset, you
will reset all the categories to the default, undoing the empirical
studies selection that you just made.)
- Notice that a reminder appears √Limiters Set. You will now need to select Peer Reviewed
Journal again.
- How many empirical articles have you found on
the topic of aggression and children and television in peer-reviewed
journals?
Part 4. Selecting an article
- We will use two articles for this assignment and
refer to them again later in the course (beginning next week). So, you might want to save a copy of
each of these articles to your computer.
- The first is Boyatzis,
Matillo and Nesbitt (1995).
Find it and select Linked Full Text. Save a copy of the article as you would save any
document, by going to File and then selecting Save As…
- Be sure to give your
file names some title that makes
sense to you. I usually use the author and date, in this case,
boyatzis_etal_1995.html
- The second is Rosenkoetter, Rosenkoetter, &
Ozretich (2004). Find it and
select Linked Full Text. Did
you get the full text? No. Just the abstract. This is an annoying
hiccough in the search system.
Full text is available, just not through the current database.
- Go BACK and select the title of the
article. You will get the detailed
information page. Scroll down
until you see Check LinkSource for more
information. Select that option and wait a moment.
- LinkSource will open in a new window and tell
you that you can view that article through Science Direct. Do so.
- Select the hyperlink to Science Direct. The article will open in a new window
in html format. Since it is easier
to save, read, and retrieve pdf files, and since this is an option, select
PDF.
- To save the pdf file, be sure to select the
disk icon in the grey pdf toolbar, just above the article on the far
left.
- Read both of these articles.
Part 5. Do not limit yourself to Full Text
available.
- Take a look at the other articles that you found
and select one that might be interesting, for example, Neto and
Fuhrman (2005).
- Submit a request for the full text of the
article by opening another Library window (cntrl-n on windows machines),
which will allow you to cut and paste information.
- On your new window, select from the top Library Services and then select InterLibrary Loan.
- You want to request a journal article using the
ILL request form. Select ILL
request form
- Cut and paste information from the journal
citation into the ILL Request form.
Submit it with a request to have the article sent to your e-mail
address.
- When you receive your article via e-mail, forward
a copy of the e-mail to me. Make sure your subject line reads 47.375
ILL request
The Library Assignment Answer Sheet follows
B. Answer Sheet
1. How many hits did you get for …
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au
arcus
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au
arcus doreen
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aggression
AND children AND television
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in
total
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in
peer-reviewed journals
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as
empirical studies in peer-reviewed journals
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Answer the following questions. You may use no more than
one sentence for a, b, d and e. You may
use two for c.
2. In the Boyatzis et al (1995) paper…
a)
What was the authors’ main hypothesis?
b)
Who were the participants?
c)
What were the experimental and control (comparison) conditions?
d)
How did the authors measure the outcome?
e)
What did the authors find?
3. In Rosenkoetter et al (2004)
a)
What was the authors’ main hypothesis?
b)
Who were the participants?
c)
What were the experimental and control (comparison) conditions?
d)
How did the authors measure the outcome?
e)
What did the authors find?
4. Please provide the authors and year of
publication for the paper you requested from InterLibrary Loan.
End
of Library Assignment