English 155: Professor Huey
Narrow or Broaden Your Search (Boolean Searching)
Use AND between terms to narrow your search
example: television and violence and children
Use OR and/or truncate (*, ?) words to broaden your search
example: children or youth or adolescents
example: child* (will find child, children, etc.)
Note: check online help for the correct truncation symbol
Popular and Scholarly Sources
Scholarly Sources:
- Authors are authorities in their
fields.
- Authors cite their sources in endnotes,
footnotes, or bibliographies.
- Individual issues have little or no
advertising.
- Articles must go through a peer-review
or refeered process.
- Articles are usually reports on scholarly
research.
- Illustrations usually take the form of
charts and graphs.
- Articles use jargon of the
discipline.
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Popular Magazines and Newspapers:
- Authors are magazine staff members or free lance writers.
- Authors often mention sources, but rarely formally cite them in
bibliographies.
- Individual issues contain numerous advertisements.
- There is no peer-review process.
- Articles are meant to inform and entertain.
- Illustrations may be numerous and colorful.
- Language is geared to the general adult audience (no specialized
knowledge of jargon needed).
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Finding Articles
You can use these databases or any others listed on the database pages; this list is only a suggestion of places to start your research. If the full-text is not available for the article you want to see, click the
button or the "Find Text" link to see if the full-text is available in another database.
Citing Your Sources
The library website provides sample citations for MLA on the Citing Your Sources page.
Contact information
If you have questions as you do your research, you can contact me directly at danielle.skaggs@csun.edu or 818-677-6808. For help 24/7, go to Ask-A- Librarian.
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