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Ethics Searching

Ethics Searching. RCS 6780 Ethical, Legal, and Professional Issues in Rehabilitation Counseling Nancy Schaefer 392-1306. Health Science Center Library http://www.library.health.ufl.edu/. The handouts used in our classes & other online tutorials. Free classes on how to use databases.

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Ethics Searching

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  1. Ethics Searching RCS 6780 Ethical, Legal, and Professional Issues in Rehabilitation Counseling Nancy Schaefer 392-1306

  2. Health Science Center Library http://www.library.health.ufl.edu/ The handouts used in our classes & other online tutorials Free classes on how to use databases Help from librarians Online info sources! How to access online resources from off campus What’s on lib. shelves Finding room #s in the Commu-nicore Bldg

  3. Getting to PsycINFO Database

  4. Simple Search - Truncation * in PsycINFO means “retrieve all words that start with these letters, no matter how they end.” So the above search should retrieve any record containing confidential, confidentially or confidentiality. Like most databases, PsycINFO requires at least 1 character before the truncation symbol (* in PsycINFO.) Click Search to run the search.

  5. Your turn • Truncate the word rehabilitation to catch all varieties—singular and plural noun, adjective, verb in present and past tenses.

  6. Proximity searching • Symbol between two words tells computer to search for the two words when they appear within some number of words of each other. w# in PsycINFO means the words must be in the order given. The above search should retrieve UF but not USF (right order but 2 intervening words) or FSU (only 1 intervening word but wrong order.)

  7. Simple Search - Proximity n# in PsycINFO allows the given words to appear in any order: rehabilitation counseling counseling in rehabilitation counseling about rehabilitation counseling for rehabilitation Note that rehabilitation n1 counselors could include rehabilitation of counselors

  8. Active page Limit # of retrievals Currently inactive page

  9. Your turn • Truncate to get ethic, ethics, ethical, ethically • Use a proximity operator on rehabilitation counseling • Limit to the last 5 years of publication and English • Limit to peer-reviewed journal articles

  10. Results Display Click here for possible full-text online

  11. SFX to Full-Text(Print only)

  12. Which issues does UF have?Is the one you want checked out?

  13. Selecting results Click here to reserve this article for later emailing, printing or saving . Folder above will change from “is empty” to “has items”

  14. More on results display • Re-sort the results list by a different criterion (default is “most recently-added to database tops the list”) • Add all results on page to Folder • Have database suggest a subject heading to capture all related records

  15. Translation, please List of sources written before and used in writing this article Number of articles/books/book chapters in this database that cited this article ! You can get this full-text online by clicking right here!!! Let’s see what the Cited References link looks like…..

  16. Add to your Folder • Link to full-text OR • Follow these leads to still more sources on topic!

  17. But wait! There’s more! Click on the Citing Articles tab to see who cited the original article in subsequent work* *(even if it’s not an article, like the example above) What IS the format of the original that is represented by this citation?

  18. Subject heading? • Standardized term for a concept • Example: elderly— • Aged • Old • Seniors (but this could also denote year in college or high school) • Standardized form of a concept • Example: rehabilitation — • Rehabilitate (also rehabilitates and rehabilitated) • Rehabilitative • Rehab • Rehabilitation

  19. Where are these subject headings? Along the left side of your Results List (so you just click to add them to your existing search)… …and on the Thesaurus page. To get there: 1. Click the Suggest Subject Terms checkbox under the search boxes. 2. Then click the Search button.

  20. How to start at Thesaurus Default Term Begins With takes you to alphabetic list of subject headings. Change radio button to the more useful Relevancy Ranked. Click Browse. As of 8-27-06, PsycINFO contained 923 citations in which RC was a topic. RC was a major topic in just 804 of those.

  21. Explode • Exploding gives you more results by including all the more specific terms associated with your search term. • To see which terms the computer will search if you explode, click the hyperlinked subject heading. • Click the box under Explode to include these more specific terms in your search.

  22. Exploding Subject Heading “Rehabilitation” All these terms will also be searched.

  23. Simple subject heading search To search a single subject heading: • Click the Major and/or Explode and/or just the plain left-side checkbox . • Then click the Search button near the top of the page.

  24. Setting up a multiple-subject heading search Follow the steps for the single subject heading search EXCEPT • Check Major Conceptonly for the most important of the concepts you’re choosing subject headings for or the one most likely to retrieve large numbers of citations. • Click the ADD button instead of the Search button. The pull-down beside Add can stay at the default OR for your first term.

  25. Adding more terms to a multi-subject heading search With the first term into the top search box as on the previous slide: • Type 2nd term in the Browse box and choose the appropriate checkbox (Major/Explode or left-side) • Change pull-down beside Add button to and if you want each citation to include BOTH terms Finally, click Add, then Search

  26. Your turn Use the Thesaurus to find : • an edited book • published in or after 2004 • That mostly focuses on professional competence in cross-cultural counseling.

  27. Easier: History • Search two topics separately • Click the Search History/Alerts tab • Click Clear at the top of the page • Click checkboxes beside searches whose results you want to combine • Set the pull-down to the correct combining word (OR retrieves either heading; AND requires both headings.) • Click Add, then Search

  28. Your turn • Keyword search on confidentiality. • Search on online therapy, requiring it to be a major topic • Combine the results of these two searches • Limit to the last 4 years

  29. Working with saved citations • Click on Folder has items • Click on Print, Email or Save. • Do NOT over-estimate your email capacity. Send just the citation list at first, THEN try sending PDFs of the full articles, just a few at a time or you may have wasted your time searching & selecting.

  30. Other Databases Didn’t find enough in PsycINFO? Try this: • Click Choose Databases tab at top of page • Unclick PsycINFO—no sense searching it again! • Click on one or more of these related databases then on Continue: • CINAHL • Professional Development Collection • Psychology and Behavioral Sciences Collection • Academic Search Premier

  31. Multi-database searching • You can search as many of these databases as you want simultaneously. • You can re-run keyword searches from PsycINFO in these other databases from the Search History/Alerts page. • You canNOT transfer a subject heading search from any of these databases to any of the other databases.

  32. Rerunning a keyword search

  33. Evaluating Websites 5 main criteria: • Accuracy • Authority • Bias • Currency • Coverage Questions to evaluate on each follow.

  34. Accuracy • How reliable is the information? • Are there obvious errors or omissions? • Is it clear who has responsibility for the accuracy of the content? • Does the document present logical reasoning for assumptions? • Does the information refer to/cite original sources or only second/third etc. hand info? • Can you verify references and outside links?

  35. Authority • Who authored this page? • Is the author separate from the "webmaster"? • Are the author's qualifications clearly stated? • Can the author be contacted for clarification? • What institution published this? Check the domain name. • Does the publisher list qualifications or outline a review process? • Are the author, institution and publisher all reputable?

  36. Bias • What opinions are expressed in this resource? • What are the goals of the resource? • Does the resource disclose who sponsors it? • For whom was it written? • How detailed is the information? • What is the context in which the information is provided?

  37. Currency • Are there dates to indicate:     1) when it was written?    2) when it was last updated? 3) when its data was gathered • Are the links current? • What other indications are there that the information is kept current?

  38. Coverage • What topics are covered? • Are topics covered in depth? • Is the resource complete or a work in progress? • How does this work compare to other works in either electronic or print? • Is the coverage unique? • Is the information really relevant?

  39. Some counseling ethics websites • American Counseling Association’s Ethics page http://www.counseling.org/Resources/CodeOfEthics/TP/Home/CT2.aspx • Santa Clara University’s Markkula Center for Applied Ethics’ Decision-Making page http://www.scu.edu/ethics/practicing/decision/ • American Mental Health Counselors Association’s Code of Ethics (good source of research topics) http://www.amhca.org/code/ • University of San Diego’s Ethics Updates’ Applied Ethics http://ethics.sandiego.edu/Applied/

  40. More counseling ethics websites • NIH Research Starting Points http://bioethics.od.nih.gov/databases.html • Georgetown U’s National Resource Center for Bioethics Literature http://www.georgetown.edu/research/nrcbl/nrc/ • University of Minnesota Center for Bioethics http://www.bioethics.umn.edu/resources/links.html#lit • Unlinked bibliography of ethics in Counseling from Oklahoma State http://home.okstate.edu/homepages.nsf/toc/ethicbiblist.html

  41. Web of Science • Go to Databases page http://www.library.health.ufl.edu/resources/index.htm • Select Web of Science

  42. Type in keywords.Uncheck Science Citation Index. Limit to last 5 years

  43. Results display Total number of results at bottom of page, along with “navigation tools” for moving forward or back page by page or to front or back of the results list.

  44. Following a known citation Type in what you know of a citation to find what publications it was built on and what subsequent publications built on it for further development of its ideas.

  45. Followed link from Cited Reference Result List – note “FIND RELATED RECORDS” button Cited reference result list

  46. Click checkbox, then click “Add to Marked List” to save a citation

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