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Searching for Literature. by Miles Hamby, Ph.D. August 21, 2008. The Literature Review. Review of what others have found on your topic Benefits (from Leedy & Ormrod 2005) Offer new ideas, persepctives, approaches or problems similar to yours Identify other researchers
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Searching for Literature by Miles Hamby, Ph.D. August 21, 2008
The Literature Review Review of what others have found on your topic Benefits (from Leedy & Ormrod 2005) • Offer new ideas, persepctives, approaches or problems similar to yours • Identify other researchers • Describe other methodologies and measruement tools • Reveal sources of data • Reveal unique interpretations and conclusions • Support the worthiness of your own study
Searching for Literature The toughest part ~ finding the keyword Sources • Ebsco • Websites/Internet • Library card catalogues
Ebsco- Your primary source! Ebsco-hosted Databases • Academic Search Premier – full text > 4,500 journals • Business Source Premier - Most used business research database; > 2,300 journals; updated daily on EBSCOhost. • Regional Business News - 75 business journals, newspapers and newswires from all metropolitan and rural areas within the United States. • ERIC(Educational Resource Information Center) - > 1,194,000 records and links to more than 100,000 full-text documents • Library, Information Science & Technology Abstracts (LISTA) - > 690 periodicals, books, research reports and proceedings; back to mid-1960s.
Juried Sources • EBSCOHost • Britannica Online • Mergent Online • Congressional Quarterly Suite • Loislaw • Oxford Reference Online • Oxford English Dictionary (OED) • Merriam-Webster's Third New International Dictionary (Unabridged) • Faulkner's Security Management Practices
Websites Everything on the internet is true! It isn’t?
Internet Seach Engines Google.com Altavista.com Askjeeves.com Excite.com Hotbot.com Infoseek.com
How to use literature Anything can be used as a reference – the crtiical thing is how it’s used! • to validate or refute • to illustrate • to defend • to compare and contrast
To validate or refute - Scholarly works! What makes a work ‘scholarly’? • Source of publication – i.e., juried • Author’s name & credentials • List of references; in-text citations • Format – eg, classic 5 chapters
To validate or refute - Other Sources • Government and Public Service websites – certain pages, if identified as valid information • Private website – certain pages if identified as valid information
All other uses - • News articles – usually anonymous • Entertainment media – eg, u-tube, movies, music • Fiction – novels, stories • Non-juried sources - eg, Wikipedia • Blogs & Personal Websites • Organizational Websites
Whatever you use - Document it!
Searching for Literature