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RESEARCH TOOL LINKS

Feinberg Library Virtual Tour

Library Catalog [OPAC] 
Text [Telnet] Version 
Web Version

Electronic Search Services

Research Guides by Subject 

InterlibraryLoan/Document Delivery

Search Engine Directory

Search Engines Explained

Boolean Searching
(from University at Albany Libraries) 

Evaluating Resources
(from Milner Library at Illinois State U.) 

Types of Resources
(from Bowling Green  State U. Libraries) 

Primary vs. Secondary Sources (from Bowling Green State Libraries)

Citing Sources

Plagiarism:  How to Avoid It (from Indiana University at Bloomington)

 

 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

COURSE RELATED RESEARCH INSTRUCTION

Course NUR 427
Research in Nursing

Course Instructor: Dr. Gretchen Beebe
Session Librarian: Holly Heller-Ross
Session Date:
Tuesday, Sept 2, 9:30-10:30am

This session was developed to help you begin work on your literature review for  relevant nursing research. Library and information research, like nursing research, is best handled through a series of flexible steps. This series of research steps keeps you moving forward with your task and provides guidance along the way.   First identify and define an issue, then conduct a literature review by searching the online catalog, research journal databases, and the Internet, then evaluate your resources using the CARS method (credibility/accuracy/reasonableness/supporting evidence). 

Identify & Define An Issue :

You can identify aspects and important issues about a research topic in nursing by searching through reference books, looking through recent issues of scholarly nursing/medical journals, or by looking through the health sections of popular magazines and newspapers (Time, Newsweek, The New York Times, Press-Republican). If you identify an issue this way you are already started on your definition and description and already have one source for your literature review.

Reference resources and your academic textbooks then provide more background and statistical material to help you understand the issue and why its relevant and worth studying. Look through your local site or hospital library's nursing collection for more information. It's good to ask a librarian for help with this part, we can point you to the right resources very quickly.

Conduct the Literature Review:

The Feinberg Library web pages can point you in the right direction by providing access to the library catalog, general and subject research databases, and Internet search engines and directories. Suggested subject research databases for nursing (jump to them from the Electronic Search Services link on the left!) are:

Health Reference Center: comprehensive, full-text database to health issues. Provides access to periodicals and reference works

Medline: medical journals references from 1965 to present

Nursing & Allied Health (CINAHL):Indexes major health professions journals

PsycINFO 1967- The premier abstracting service for psychology journals, covers from 1967to present

You may often need to go beyond nursing literature into the subject fields of Psychology, Sociology, Medicine, Education, Politics or other disciplines to find information on your  issue. The library also offers research databases for these areas of study and you use them in the same way.

Search the Internet:

The FLIRT page for nursing and allied health will lead you to several good internet sites to help you get started. You can also search using any Internet search engine such as Yahoo! or Google. Other Internet starting points include the Emporia University List of electronic journals in nursing at http://ejw.i8.com/nursee-j.htm or their list of nursing Internet sites at http://ejw.i8.com/nurseweb.htm

This page created by: Holly Heller-Ross, MLS     holly.hellerross@plattsburgh.edu
Last Updated: August 29, 2003