Kinesiology

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Kinesiology:An Adventure in Research

Beaman LibraryFall 2008

Research is a process…

• It is ORGANIZED

• It is METHODICAL

• It is COMPREHENSIVE

The Researcher’s 2 questions…

• WHAT do I want to know?

• WHERE do I find that information?

Catacomb…the online catalog

All searching begins withthe online catalog.

Information Resources in Beaman Library

Reference books

Periodicals

Indexes

Databases/Websites

Reference Sources: Location Main Level – West Wing

Periodicals - Location

Current (2008) magazines and journals are arranged alphabetically on open shelves for easy browsing.

Periodicals - Location

Bound periodicals are arranged alphabetically and chronologically.

Periodicals - Location

Some periodicals are kept on microfilm or microfiche.

Periodical Indexes (print)- Location

Periodical indexes are located on the main floor, east wing of Beaman Library.

Periodical Indexes/Academic Databases

• Online• Tennessee Electronic

Library (TEL)• Expanded Academic

ASAP• General OneFile• Health Reference

Center--Academic

Journals on the Web

The Internet Public Library Online Serials

Find articles.com

free access to medical journals

Magazines, journals, E-zines, and more.

Academic Databases

Available from Catacomb @ http://library.lipscomb.eduCampus access only

Government Databases

National Library of Medicine

National Institutes of HealthHealth and drug information for patients, family and friends

Biomedical journal literature from MEDLINE/PubMed

Subject Interest Databases

Archive of athletic journals

For health care professionals

Education journals and research

Search engines

search specifically for scholarly literature: peer-reviewed papers

theses books preprints abstracts technical reports

arranges search results by relevancy

http://scholar.google.com/

Evaluating Information

• from monographs (books)

• from periodicals (journals)

• from databases/websites

Evaluating Journal Articles

Scholarly Journal Characteristics• limited audience• for scholars or researchers in a specialized field

(e.g. medicine, psychology)

Evaluating Journal Articles

• found in specialized (subject) indexes

such as the Physical Education Index

• mostly print• graphs and/or tables• few or no ads

Evaluating Journal Articles

Scholarly Journal Characteristics

• cites research• includes notes and/or bibliography• passes review by panel of experts

• peer reviewed• refereed

A Primary source

Johnson, Kent. A survey of kinesiology students at Lipscomb University with severe tendon trauma of the right thumb due to excessive cell phone use. Nashville: LU Press, 2007.

Reports original research

A Secondary source

Henry, Ruth. “A second look at Johnson’s survey.” The Babbler, vol. 59, no. 6, October 1, 2007.

Comments, reviews, critiques a primary source.

World Wide Web Resources

• Academic .edu

• Government .gov

• Specialized/commercial.com/.org/.net

Web Site Evaluation—the WWW’s

Who says it? Author or sponsor Credentials of responsible party

Web Site Evaluation—the WWW’s

What does it claim, assert, etc.? Purpose of web site Biased, objective, fair Factual…in depth Correct grammar, spelling, etc.

Web Site Evaluation—the WWW’s

When was it said?• Publication date• Revisions• Links up-to-date

Interlibrary Loan

• Question: What do I do if a resource I need is not available in the Beaman Library?

• Answer: Use the Interlibrary loan service provided by Beaman Library

Interlibrary Loan

Facts about Interlibrary Loan:

• Interlibrary Loan is a service provided by Beaman Library to obtain materials NOT owned by Beaman Library.

• The conditions of this service are set by the National Interlibrary Loan Code.

• The loan period is determined by the lending library.

• Athena is an area consortium of local libraries who loan and borrow from one another without charge.

• Applications are available at the Reference desk or online in Catacomb.

Access form online: http://library.lipscomb.edu

Your mission...

• Come up with a suitable topic (not too broad, not too narrow)

• Be able to find resources in all formats (books, articles, websites, etc.)

• Incorporate & cite these sources correctly (be careful not to plagiarize!)

• Remember: librarians are here to help you with your mission!

SAIL

Search – indexes/databases (evaluate)Analyze – compare, contrast; separate

fact from opinionInventory – Do I have enough, too

much, too little?Learn – new information and new

information skills