College English

 

October 15, 2007

Shirley Knight                                            Lisa  Williams, Professor

sknight@ramapo.edu, x7315                     AENG 180-09


 I. The George T. Potter Library Homepage

  • Provides access to the catalog (OPAC), databases, course reserves, interlibrary loan forms, and more.

II. Reference Material

  • The reference stacks are located on the 3rd floor (this is also the library's entrance).
  • Some useful materials for your projects:

Call Number

Title

Encyclopedia Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity

Ref  HV 6322.7 .E532

2005

Holocaust Chronicle: A History in Words and Pictures

Ref  JL 6530 .L35

2004

Encyclopedia of the Third Reich

Ref  DD 256.5 .S57

1976

CIA World Fact Book
Talking Terrorism: A Dictionary of the Loaded Language of Political Violence

Ref  HV 6431 .H455

2003

The Making of a Terrorist: Recruitment, Training, and Root Causes

Ref  HV 64 31 .M353

2006

Encyclopedia of World Terrorism

Ref  HV 6431 .E53

1997

War Crimes and Justice: a reference handbook

Ref  HF 31 .C76 W253

2002

Women and the Military Ref U21.75 .S541996
 The Psychology of Terrorism

Ref  HV 6431 .P798

2002

Handbook of Moral Development

Ref  BF 723 .M54 H354

2006

 

III  Electronic Resources

Lexis-Nexis: Acacemic Offers full-text newspaper and journal articles on top news, general news, legal news, news transcripts and much, much, more.
America's Newspapers

Each newspaper or wire service provides unique coverage of current and historical events about local and regional news, including information about cultural activities, the people in the community and more.

See Also:  
Proquest Newspapers Provides full-text access to the New York Times, the New York Times Book Review,  the New York Times Magazine, and the Wall Street Journal.
Gallup Brain A living record of 70 years of public opinion polls.
Historical New York Times Offers full-text and full image articles for newspapers dating back from the 19th century.

 

Scholarly/Peer Reviewed/Refereed articles have been reviewed by a selected panel of experts in the discipline covered by that journal. Many of the databases allow you to limit your search to these articles.

  IV.  Journal Finder and Interlibrary Loan

  • Journal Finder:indicates whether full-text articles in the George T. Potter Library  are in print, microform, or through a full-text database. This feature also appears in many of our databases.
  • Interlibrary Loan: allows students to borrow a book or article that the
  • George T. Potter library does not own. There is a link from the Journal Finder page.

Both of these links can be found under QUICK LINKS on the library's homepage.

Tips

  1. Switch to the Advanced Search page in a database. This will give you more control over your results.
  2. Use Boolean Operators--AND, OR, NOT and Quotation Marks when a search. For Example: "war and conflict" or "Darfur and refugees"
  3. Always check your Spelling if the database results are zero.
  4. Use the Subject Terms or Thesaurus link, if available, to find the best terms to use in a database.

V. Web Sources

  • Use the following Subject Resources under History, Holocaust and Genocide, and Human Rights to locate supplemental information on your topics.
  • EurpDocs: Primary Historical Documents from Western Europe
  • The NizkoProject
  • Human Rights Web Homepage

 

  • Use IXQuick MetaSearch  http://www.ixquick.com cover more of the internet by searching many popular search engines at the same time and find websites in english or fourteen other languages.
  • Use Evaluating Websites to determine if the site is authoritative enough to use in your paper.
 

 VI. Finding Books at the Potter Library

  • Catalog: use this to find books, periodical titles (NOT articles), government documents, reserve items, music,and movies owned by the Library. You may limit a search by language, year(s) of publication, type of material, etc. This may take a few seconds to load.
  • Use the Basic Search to find material using Keywords
    • For example: search for "war crimes" or "war on terror" to locate a broad range of materials the library has on these keywords
    • Use quotation marks around a multi-word phrase so that the catalog system will treat it as a single word. For example, "Iraq War"
    • When you find an appropriate title, click on the Subject etc. tab located at the top of a catalog record to see which Library of Congress subject headings are discussed in that particular book/DVD/periodical to get to more titles that deal with that subject

                                            OR

  • Limit your search to Documents Without Shelves to access only online United States government documents.

  

                                                              OR

  • Search the catalog using Subject Browse feature if you know the relevant Library of Congress
  • Subject Heading, for example:

 

Subject Headings
  • Burma--Politics and Government--1998-
  • Culture Conflict
  • Genocide--Sudan--Darfur
  • Human rights--Burma
  • Human rights--Iraq
  • Human rights--Sudan--Darfur
  • Iraq War, 2003-
  • Refugees
  • Socialization
  • Terrorism--Psychological Aspects
  • War Crimes
  • War and Society
  • Women and War

 

    • Tips
    1. Start with broad searches. It is much easier to discard too much rather than start with too little.
    2. If you don't know the Subject Heading, use the Subject etc. tab located on the top of a catalog record to get to the headings. This will help you focus in on more relevant material.
    3. You can "virtually" browse the shelves by clicking on the call number in a record.

 

VII. Bibliography

 

  • Course Reserve: need either Ramapo ID (R#) or bar code (provided by the library)

 

  • Use QandA NJ: a 24/7 virtual chat with a reference librarian.

Need more help? Visit or call the Reference Desk: 201.684.7574

 
| George T. Potter Library |
| 505 Ramapo Valley Road, Mahwah NJ 07430 | (201) 684-7575 |

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