Social Issues

November 10, 2008

                            

Professor Karl Johnson                    SOSC 101-14


       

 I. Library Homepage

  • Provides access to the catalog (OPAC), databases, interlibrary loan forms, etc.

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II. Find Books

  • Catalog: use this to find books, periodical titles (NOT articles), government documents, reserve item, 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.
  • In Basic Search, search the catalog using Keywords to find material, for example:
     
    • Search for civil rights to locate a broad range of material and look for ideas for your project.
     
    • Use quotation marks around a multi-word phrase, e.g., "United States" AND immigration AND laws to ensure that the catalog will locate more focused results.
 

OR

  • Use the Subject Browse feature if you know the relevant Library of Congress (LC) subject heading, for example:
Civil Rights--United States

Ethnicity--United States

United States--Race Relations

 

OR

 
  • When searching the Catalog for Primary Sources. Use the Command Line/Boolean. This feature lets you put terms in that will insure your results will be primary. For example, search for letters AND"world war II"

 

What are Primary Sources?

  • Primary Sources enable the researchers to get as close as possible to what actually happened during an historical event or time period. The information and ideas were either created during the time period or created later by a participant or observer of the event being studied.
Examples of Primary Sources
  • Film and televion programs
  • Memoirs, diaries, letters, interviews, and other first hand accounts
  • Music recordsings
  • Newspaper and magazine articles from the period under study
  • Paintings
  • Photographs
  • Official publications, government documents, court reports and police records

 

               Tips      

  1. Start with broad searches. It's much easier to discard too much rather than start with too little.
  2. If you don't know the Subject Heading, use the Subjects, 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 and viewing the records for similar items.

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III. Reference Material

  • The reference stacks are located on the 3rd floor (this is also the library's entrance).
  • Selected materials for your projects:
  • Handbook of Interview Research: Context & Method

    Ref  H61.28 .H36

    2001

    Annals  of America

    Ref E 173 .A793

    2003

    Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups

    Ref  E184 .A1 H35

    1980

    American Immigrant Cultures: Builders of a Nation

    Ref E 184 .A1 A63448

    1997

    Encyclopedia of Southern Culture

    Ref F 209 .E53

    1989

    The Family in America: An encyclopedia

    Ref HQ 536 .H365

    2001

    Dictionary of Race and Ethnic Relations

    Ref HT 1521 .C33

    1994

    Encyclopedia of Race and Racism

    Ref  E 184 .A1

    E584

    2008

    Beacham's Encyclopedia of Social Change:  America in the twentieth century

    Ref HN 59.2 .B43

    2001

    The Color of Words: an encyclopedic dictionary of ethnic bias in the United States

    Ref E184 .A1 H466

    2001

    Social Issues in American: An encyclopedia

    Ref HN 57 .S624

    2006

    Contemporary Ethnic Geographies in America

    Ref E 184 .A1 .C5975

    2007

    Encyclopedia of Modern Ethnic Conflicts

    Ref GN 496 .E56

    2003

    Immigration in America Today: an encyclopedia

    Ref JV 6465 .I4754

    2006

    Civil Rights in the United States

    Ref E184 .A1 C47

    2000

    Making It in America: A sourcebook on Eminent Ethnic Americans

    Ref E 184 .A1 M263

    2001

Tips

    1. Use reference books to browse for project ideas and to get started on your research.
    2. Use the Bibliographies at the end of encyclopedia entries to find more information on your topic.

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IV. Electronic Resources

Some useful Databases for your projects:

JSTOR Complete

A full-text archival database which contains full runs of scholarly journals beginning with the first issue of a title. There's a gap from 1-5 years between a journals most current issue and content.

Linked to America: History and Life.

America: History and Life Includes abstracts and citations, many of which can be found as full-text articles in JSTOR. Covers key english language historical journals from major countries, state and local areas in the United States and Canada etc.
Historical New York Times Full-text of the entire New York Times from 1851-2002.
Ethnic NewsWatch A full-text database of newspapers, journals etc.of the ethnic minority and native press.
Academic Search Premier A multidisciplinary database that contains many full-text articles.

(Scholarly/Peer Reviewed/Refereed articles have been reviewed by a selected panel of experts in the discipline covered by that journal).

    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 when running a search. For Example:  "United States" OR America AND "ethnic groups" NOT Irish
  3. Always check your Spelling if the database results are Zero..

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V. Interlibrary Loan

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

  • Interlibrary Loan: allows students to borrow a book or article that the Potter library does not own. There is a link from the Journal Finder page.
  • Journal Finder: this provides information regarding if a journal is available full-text online, in print in the library, or available on microfilm.

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VI.  Web Sources

VII. Other Web Site

  • The Irma & Paul Milstein Collection is part of the New York Public Library's Humanities and Social Sciences Division documenting American national, state, local history, genealogy and more
  • Use Evaluating Websites to determine if the site is authoritative enough to use in your paper.

 

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VIII.  Preparing Bibliographies

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Need more help!

  • Contact Shirley Knight 201.684.7315
  • Visit or call the Reference Desk  201 684.7574
  • QandANJ - a 24/7 virtual chat with a reference librarian

 
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