library orientation for hs1001 sociology students

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Library Orientation presented by: Jenny Wong Social Sciences Librarian (Sociology) [email protected] for HS1001 Sociology Students 6 September 2012

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Page 1: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Library Orientation

presented by:

Jenny WongSocial Sciences Librarian (Sociology)[email protected]

for HS1001 Sociology Students6 September 2012

Page 2: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Lost in the information jungle?

Page 3: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Outline1. Library Services & Library Resources

2. Developing a Search Strategy

3. Locating Books, E-Books & AV Materials Library Catalogue

Course Reserves

4. Locating Journal Articles E-Journals & Print Journals

A-Z List

5. Searching by Topic in Databases

6. Locating Past Student’s Works – DR-NTU

7. Web Scale Discovery Tool – OneSearch

8. Internet Sources full text@NTU Library

Findit@NTU

9. Plagiarism & Citations ASA Citation Style

Managing References with EndNote

10. Useful Guides & Contacts

Page 4: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

1. LIBRARY SERVICES & LIBRARY RESOURCES

Page 5: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Getting Started

Page 6: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Library Websitewww.ntu.edu.sg/library

Page 7: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

NTU Library System – 7 Subject Libraries

Lee Wee Nam LibraryAsian Communication Resource Centre (ACRC)

Art, Design & Media Library

Humanities & Social Sciences Library

Chinese Library

Wang Gungwu Library

Business Library

7

Page 8: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Humanities & Social Sciences Library

Economics, Linguistics, Literature, Psychology, Sociology…

Block S4-B3C-05

Page 9: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Opening Hours

Semester

Mon – Fri 8:30 am to 9:30 pm

Sat 8:30 am to 5:00 pm

Sun Closed

Vacation

Mon – Fri 8:30 am to 7:00 pm

Sat 8:30 am to 5:00 pm

Sun Closed

www.ntu.edu.sg/library/about/open

Page 10: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Library Facilities

• Self-service checkouts • Learning Commons

• PCs & wireless access Learning Pods

• Printing Multi-monitor Workstations

• Photocopying Recording Room

• Scanning • Study Rooms

• E-payment kiosks • Cinema Rooms

• Discussion Rooms

Page 11: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

To book?

ntufbs.ntu.edu.sg/NTUFBS

Page 12: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Facilities @ HSS Library

Computing facilities

Self-service printing

Self-service photocopying

Self-check & payment station

Book deposit bin

Study seats

Page 13: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Borrowing Privileges

Borrowing

Matriculation card + Library item

Self-service checkouts (except for Course Reserves)

Service counter

20 items, 28 days each (except for Course Reserves)

NIE Library

Bring along your matriculation card

Register in person at the NIE Library

www.ntu.edu.sg/library/membership/student

Page 14: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Returning Materials

Print materials

Return to any NTU Library or via book deposit bins except for

Course reserve materials

Items with accompanying CDs

AV materials

Return to any NTU Library

Page 15: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Renewing Materials

Online renewal via Library Account

Renew up to 6 times

Date due email reminders

Problems?

Call 6790 4691

Email [email protected]

Page 16: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Access Your Library Account

Page 18: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Reserving Materials

Reserve library materials online

Materials with the following status:

On loan (except for Course Reserves)

In transit

On order

On hold for someone

Up to 10 items at any one time

Page 19: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Item Reservation

Page 21: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Locating Library Resources

BooksPrint

JournalseBooks

AV

Library Catalogue

Research ArticlesPatents

Conference Proceedings

StandardsDatabases

eJournalsA-Z List

DR-NTU

FYPs

Theses

Page 22: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Accessing E-Resources

On site and remote access to library e-resources

Login using NTU Network username & password

student\username

Page 23: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students
Page 24: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Locating Past Year Exam Papers

Browse by Schools

Exam Papers by Semester

Page 25: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

2. DEVELOPING A SEARCH STRATEGY

Page 26: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

1. Think of Search Terms

Brainstorm and generate keywords

Identify keywords that represent the major concepts

Consider alternative spellings, synonyms, acronyms, related terms

For example:

handphone,

expressway,

domestic helper,

mobile phone, cell phonehighway, freeway, motorwaydomestic worker,

housekeeper

Page 27: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

2. Boolean Connectors

Using Boolean Connectors to connect the terms in each concept

domestic helper AND Singapore

domestic helper Singapore

domestic helper OR domestic worker

domestic helper domestic worker

(domestic helper OR domestic worker) NOT Filipino

domestic helper domestic worker

Filipino

Narrowing the search

Broadening the search

Narrowing the search

Page 28: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

3. Search Tips

Phrase search “ ” ‘ ’

“domestic helper”

‘domestic helper’

Truncation * $

femin* → feminine, feminism, feministic

Wildcard ?

wom?n → woman, women

globali?ation → globalisation, globalization

Note: There is no common standard for symbols. Look at the help pages of each database to ensure the correct use of the various symbols.

Page 29: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

3. LOCATING BOOKS, E-BOOKS & AV MATERIALS

Page 30: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Library Catalogue

Page 31: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Locating Books

Call numberLC

Classification

Page 32: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Locating E-Books

keywords AND e-book

Page 33: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

E-Books

Page 34: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Locating AV Materials

Page 35: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

AV Materials

Page 36: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Course Reserves

Textbooks, readings & AV materials for specific courses

Page 37: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Course Reserves

Page 38: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

4. LOCATING JOURNAL ARTICLES

Page 39: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Which is a book and which is a journal?

Butler, Judith. 1993. “Imitation and Gender Insubordination.” Pp. 307-20 in The Lesbian and Gay Studies Reader, edited by H. Abelove, M. A. Barale, and D. M. Halperin. New York: Routledge.

McLaughlin, Heather, Christopher Uggen, and Amy Blackstone. 2012. “Sexual Harassment, Workplace Authority, and the Paradox of Power.” American Sociological Review 77(4):625-47.

Author of chapter

Year of publication

Chapter title

Title of book

Editors of bookPublisher

Page numbers

Authors of article

Year of publication of article

Article title

Journal title

Journal volume no.

Journal issue no.

Journal page no.

Book

Journal

Page 40: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Locating Print Journals

Page 41: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Locating E-Journals

Page 42: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Locating E-JournalsJournal search via Title

Page 43: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Locating E-JournalsJournal search via Title

Page 44: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Locating E-JournalsJournal search via Subject

Page 45: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Locating E-JournalsJournal search via Subject browse

Page 46: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Locating E-JournalsJournal search via Providers

Page 48: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Top 10 Journals in Sociology(ranked by impact factor 2011)

1. Annual Review of Sociology

2. American Sociological Review

3. Annals of Tourism Research

4. American Journal of Sociology

5. Sociological Methodology

6. Social Networks

7. Gender & Society

8. Population and Development Review

9. Politics & Society

10. Journal of Marriage and Family

Source: 2011 Journal Citation Reports (Thomson Reuters, 2012)

Page 49: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

5. SEARCHING BY TOPIC IN DATABASES

Page 50: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Database & JournalWhat is the difference? Databas

e

Journal

Page 51: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Databases

Click to view more information about the database

Page 52: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Sociological Abstracts

• Abstracts and indexes over 2,000 journals, books, reviews, dissertations, conference papers and working papers in sociology and related disciplines in the social and behavioral sciences

• Coverage 1952 to current

• Updated monthly

Page 54: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Research topic: Gender Equity and Fertility in Singapore

Research questions: Does higher gender equity equate to higher fertility

rate? Is there a relation between gender equity and fertility

rate? …

Gender equityGender equality, Sexual equity, Sexual equality,Gender inequality, Sexual inequality

Fertility

Singapore

Page 55: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Academic Search Premier

• Contains indexing and abstracts for more than 8,500 journals, with full text for more than 4,600 of those titles

• Coverage dated as far back as 1975

• Updated daily

Page 56: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

JSTOR

Provides backfiles of core scholarly journals in many disciplines

Includes scholarly journals, conference proceedings, primary source materials, and books

Page 57: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

JSTOR

Page 58: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Newspaper Search

Page 59: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Factiva

Provides news and business information

Covers 10,000 sources from more than 159 countries in 22 languages

Page 61: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

6. LOCATING PAST STUDENT’S WORKS

Page 62: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Digital Repository – NTU

Page 63: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Digital Repository – NTU

Page 64: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Digital Repository – NTU

Page 65: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

7. WEB SCALE DISCOVERY TOOL

Page 66: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

BooksPrint

JournalseBooks

AV

Library Catalogue

Research ArticlesPatents

Conference Proceedings

StandardsDatabases

eJournalsA-Z List

DR-NTU

FYPs

Theses

Page 67: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

OneSearchDiscovery library resources Google

“style”

Page 68: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

OneSearch Locating library resources

Page 69: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

OneSearch Locating library resources

Page 70: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

OneSearch Record no. 3

Page 71: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

OneSearch Record no. 4

Retrieve Catalog Item

Page 72: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

OneSearch Record no. 7

Retrieve Catalog Item

Page 73: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

OneSearchAccessinge-articles

Page 74: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

OneSearch

Page 75: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

8. INTERNET SOURCES

Page 76: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

full text@NTU Library Go to Library homepageTools & Guides full text@NTU

Library Install

Demo

Page 77: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Findit@NTU

Page 78: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Findit@NTU

Page 79: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Library ToolbarLibrary toolbar quick access to all things in Library

Go to Library homepageTools & GuidesNTU Library Toolbar Install

Page 80: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

9. PLAGIARISM & CITATIONS

Page 81: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

NTU Honour Code

Plagiarism

To use or pass off as one’s own, the writings or ideas of another, without acknowledging or crediting the source from which the ideas are taken.

Collusion

Submitting an assignment, project or report completed by another person and passing it off as one’s own; Preparing an assignment, project or report for a fellow student who submits the work as his or her own.

Source: http://www.ntu.edu.sg/sao/Pages/HonourCode.aspx

Page 82: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

DeliberateAccidental

Two Types of Plagiarism

Page 83: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Most Common Forms

Cutting and pasting from others without attribution

Copying directly from another source without attributing from where you’ve taken it

Using diagram or table from another source without referencing

Reusing some parts of your previous assignment

Submitting another person’s work as your own

How can the University detect plagiarism?

All assignments must be submitted through a program to detect plagiarism

Turnitin

Page 84: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

How to Avoid?

Always …

1. Give credit whenever you use any: idea, theory, illustration, statistics, graphs, drawings, images

or opinion of others quotation of actual spoken or written words of others paraphrase of spoken or written words of others

2. If you are not sure, always cite

3. Follow citation rules – cite and reference correctly

Page 85: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Citing Your Sources

Complete referencing includes: in-text citations and references

Formatting differs depending on the style you are using

Division of Sociology uses:

American Sociological Association (ASA) Style

American Sociological Association. 2010. Style Guide. 4th ed. Washington, DC: American Sociological Association.

Call no.: HM569.S938 2010

Page 86: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Citing Your Sources

Page 87: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

In-Text CitationIf the author’s name is in the text

According to Saw (2005), suicide is linked to social isolation …

If the author’s name is not in the text

Suicide has been linked to social isolation (Saw 2005).

For joint authors

Suicide has been linked to social isolation (Saw and Wang 2005).

Direct quotations

According to Saw (2005), the phenomenon of suicide has “been positively shown to be linked to isolation” (p. 104).

The phenomenon of suicide has “been positively shown to be linked to isolation” according to Saw (2005:104).

Page 88: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

References: BooksSingle authorElliott, Anthony. 2009. Contemporary Social Theory: An Introduction.

London: Routledge.

Two authorsMacionis, John J. and Ken Plummer. 2008. Sociology: A Global

Introduction. 4th ed. Harlow, England: Pearson Prentice Hall.

Edited bookSeidman, Steven and Jeffrey C. Alexander, eds. 2008. The New

Social Theory Reader: Contemporary Debates. 2nd ed. London: Routledge.

Chapter in edited book or collected worksButler, Judith. 1993. “Imitation and Gender Insubordination.” Pp.

307-20 in The Lesbian and Gay Studies Reader, edited by H. Abelove, M. A. Barale, and D. M. Halperin. New York: Routledge.

Page 89: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

References: Journal ArticlesSingle authorPekerti, Andre A. 2008. “The Interdependent Family-Centric Career:

Career Perspective of the Overseas Chinese in Indonesia.” Career Development Quarterly 56(4):362-77.

Three authorsMcLaughlin, Heather, Christopher Uggen, and Amy Blackstone.

2012. “Sexual Harassment, Workplace Authority, and the Paradox of Power.” American Sociological Review 77(4):625-47.

Page 90: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students
Page 91: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

EndNote

A database for storing and

managing all your references &

images.

An online search tool

A tool for creating bibliographies & figure lists for

your project report/scientific paper/thesis/dissertation.

Page 92: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Managing References

Page 93: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Citing & Referencing Correctly

Page 94: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

Get EndNote!

• Where to download EndNote?• http://www.ntu.edu.sg/library/Lip/endnoteDownloading

EndNote

• Instructional Services Division • http://www.ntu.edu.sg/library/about/staffdirectory/div

isions/isd/Pages/default.aspx• Email: [email protected]

Technical Support

• EndNote Workshops• http://www.ntu.edu.sg/library/Lip/endnote/Pages/En

dNoteWorkshops.aspx

Training

Page 95: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

10. USEFUL GUIDES & CONTACTS

Page 98: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

@ntu.library @NTUlibraries

@TheNTUlibrariesmobile.ntu.edu.sg

@

Page 99: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students

• Jenny Wong (Subject Librarian) 6513 8224 / 8227

[email protected]

• Research Assistance Desk 6790 6312

[email protected]

• HSS Library 6513 8226 [email protected]

Need Help?

Page 100: Library Orientation for HS1001 Sociology Students