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Fulbright Preacademic Seminar Research Methods: Computer & Web Techniques. Vivien Petras vivienp@sims.berkeley.edu. Outline. Find / research resources Evaluate resources Manage resources. 1. Find / research resources. Find / research resources - basics. Why use the Web? Quick Up-to-date
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Fulbright Preacademic SeminarResearch Methods: Computer & Web Techniques Vivien Petras vivienp@sims.berkeley.edu
Outline • Find / research resources • Evaluate resources • Manage resources
Find / research resources - basics Why use the Web? • Quick • Up-to-date • Overview • Convenient • Most library resources are web accessible
Find / research resources – what you should be aware of • Where do you go for research assistance? • What are the resources for your discipline? • What is the vocabulary/language of your discipline? • Research methodologies • Sources: primary, secondary, format of resources
Find / research resources – First steps Identify: • Realm of your research • Research question(s) • What you hope to find • Resources to turn to One of the more important questions you have to answer is where to search. Never assume that one resource provides all the answers.
Where to search… • Five-Step Search Strategy. From the UC Berkeley Teaching Library: http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/Strategies.html • Choose the best search for your information need. From NoodleTools: http://www.noodletools.com/debbie/literacies/information/5locate/adviceengine.html • How to choose a search engine or directory. From University at Albany: http://www.internettutorials.net/choose.html
Searching the Internet • Search engines • Subject directories • The deep / invisible web • (Metasearch) • Advanced web searching • Specialized resources • Discipline-specific resources
1. Search engines • No human selection or interference in search / selection • Not organized by subject • Search the whole web not only academic information • Full-text of web pages • Not filtered for quality: you need to evaluate! • Work best for specific, quick queries The best search engines to use. From UC Berkeley Teaching Library: http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/SearchEngines.html
2. Subject directories • Human selection of web sites • Organized by subject • Subject categories not standardized • Searchable but usually not full-text of web sites indexed • Much smaller than what search engines cover • Good for overview The best subject directories to use. From UC Berkeley Teaching Library: http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/SubjDirectories.html
3. The deep / invisible web • Pages cannot be found in search engines / rarely in subject directories • Behind subscription passwords or dynamic pages • Searchable databases that are usually of higher quality and more specific Choosing invisible web databases. From NoodleTools. http://www.noodletools.com/debbie/literacies/information/5locate/advicedepth.html What is the invisible web. From UC Berkeley Teaching Library. http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/InvisibleWeb.html
4. Metasearch • Metasearch engines search more than one search engine at once • Remove duplicate search results • Often omit Google as search engine • Can’t use any advanced search options Usually you are better served searching the search engines individually. Metasearch engines. From UC Berkeley Teaching Library. http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/MetaSearch.html
5. Advanced web searching Concept processing / clustering • SurfWax http://www.surfwax.com • Exalead http://www.exalead.com • Clusty http://www.clusty.com • Graphical presentation • Kartoo http://www.kartoo.com • Mooter http://www.mooter.com • Narrowing / expanding your search • Ask.com http://www.ask.com • Expert searching • Google Answers http://answers.google.com • Yahoo Answers http://answers.yahoo.com
6. Specialized resources • News: Google News http://news.google.com • Blogs: Technorati http://www.technorati.com • Newsgroups: Google Groups http://groups.google.com • Mailing Lists: Tile.net http://tile.net • People: Yahoo People Finder http://people.yahoo.com • Reference: University at Albany Reference Collection. http://library.albany.edu/reference
6. Specialized resources - Blogs • Commentary • Not scholarly, but might provide a fresh and current outlook on things related to your research
6. Specialized resources: Scholarly material • For academic research, use library databases or academically oriented web resources Search engines for scholarly material: • Infomine (annotated & organized by subject) • http://infomine.ucr.edu • Windows Live Academic • http://academic.live.com • Google Book Search • http://books.google.com • Google Scholar • http://scholar.google.com
6. Google Scholar / Windows Live Academic • Quick alternative to library databases • Mostly articles found by search engine robots (or collaborations) from academic publishers, professional societies, preprint repositories, web • Full text (if available) or citation • Might be connected to your library’s journal subscriptions • Google Scholar: Cited-by feature (similar to Web of Science) • Windows Live Academic: • provides reference manager format • provides list of journals covered (http://academic.live.com/AcademicJournals.htm)
6. Google Scholar / Windows Live Academic • Not comprehensive • Some subject areas might not be represented • Results can be random • Ranking of results not clear • Can have articles that are not scholarly • Google Scholar: • don’t disclose which sources are indexed and which aren’t • can’t import results into reference management software
7. Discipline-specific resources • Check your university library for subject guides. • UC Berkeley Subject guides: http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/AboutLibrary/libraries_collections.html • Academic and Professional Resources Organized by Fields of Study. Purdue University: http://owl.english.purdue.edu/internet/resources/fieldsam.html http://owl.english.purdue.edu/internet/resources/fieldsnz.html • Social Science Information Gateway Tutorials for different social science fields: http://www.sosig.ac.uk/training/virtual_training.html
Find / research resources – more links • Consult your library web pages. • UC Berkeley Teaching Library: http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/FindInfo.html • 21st Century Literacies. From NoodleTools: http://www.noodletools.com/debbie/literacies/21c.html • The Building Blocks of research. From NoodleTools: http://www.noodletools.com/debbie/literacies/information/1over/infolit1.html • Googling to the Max: http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/Google.html
Evaluate resources - basics How do you know that the web page you are reading: • provides accurate information? • is up-to-date? • is scholarly enough to provide valuable information? • What makes a web page “good”?
Evaluate resources - criteria • Accuracy • Authority • Objectivity • Coverage • Currency
1. Accuracy • Reliable information? • Content verifiable through some other source? • Are sources documented with footnotes or links? • Quality links to websites on similar topics? • Additional sources for research (bibliography)? • Is there an editor or someone who verifies/checks the information?
2. Authority • Who is responsible for the content? • Is it somebody's personal page? • What type of domain does it come from (.edu, .gov, .com)? • Is it published by an entity that makes sense? • Is the background of the author explained? • Can the author be contacted?
3. Objectivity • What is the purpose of the site? • Is there a balanced viewpoint? • What is the audience of the website? • Does the site contain advertising? • Who is funding the site?
4. Coverage • Is the information comprehensive for your needs? • Is there information reproduced? If so, is it altered? • What does this page offer that is not found elsewhere?
5. Currency • When was the content created? • How often is the information revised? • How current are the links? • How persistent is the page?
Evaluate resources – more links Evaluating web resources: • UC Berkeley Teaching Library http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/Evaluate.html • Johns Hopkins Library http://www.library.jhu.edu/researchhelp/general/evaluating/ General evaluation of information resources: • UC Berkeley Teaching Library http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Evaluation.html • Cornell Library http://www.library.cornell.edu/olinuris/ref/research/skill26.htm
Manage resources - basics Whenever you search for an academic paper or another scholarly endeavor, it pays to keep track of the resources you found. You probably want to: • Keep track of what you’ve seen • Find it again • Re-use • Organize • Cite
Manage resources • Content / learning management • Bookmark management • Reference management • Citing your resources
1. Content management • Refer to Jeanette’s file organization tips • Come up with a strategy on how to manage your content • per class, per research project, per year • class notes, project ideas, bookmarks, references, articles, scholarly material • AND be consistent!
2. Bookmark management Goal: keep track, manage, cluster and annotate your links • Del.icio.us (social bookmark manager) http://del.icio.us/ • Connotea (bookmarking for scientists) http://www.connotea.org • Free bookmark managers http://www.lights.com/pickalink/bookmarks/
3. Reference management If I could offer you only one tip for the future: reference management would be it. :) • Keep track of your references while you are collecting them. • Put them in a format that is re-usable or in a common citation format (or use a reference manager). • Keep a master file of all references (besides separate files for individual papers / projects etc.). • Annotate and make notes about your references right after you read them. • Invest into reference management software.
3. Reference management • CiteULike: http://www.citeulike.org • Free • Web-based • Mostly for web resources • Exports to Bibtex or Endnote • Refworks http://www.refworks.com/ • Web-based • Your organization might have a group account • Generates bibliographies in several formats • Tutorial: http://www.refworks.com/tutorial/
3. Reference management • Reference Manager: http://www.refman.com • Search and import from bibliographic databases • Output any bibliographic style • Directly connect to your word processing program • Tutorial: http://www.refman.com/training/tutorial/RefManBasics.asp • Endnote: http://www.endnote.com • Like Reference Manager • Tutorial: http://www.endnote.com/training/ Check for student discounts in your university bookstore or computer store.
4. Citing your resources • Even if the resource is on the Internet, do not assume it’s free. • Always cite your source, especially if you are quoting (copying & pasting) directly from it. • For web resources, a date is necessary (date of last access). • How you cite is dependent on the style requested for your paper. • Endnote and Reference Manager can connect your citations directly to your bibliography in your word processing program.