Bulgarian History /681-1990/ AUBG Library Resources
Download
Report
Transcript Bulgarian History /681-1990/ AUBG Library Resources
Global History Since 1500
AUBG Library Resources
Gergana Georgieva
Information Literacy Librarian
2010
Levels of instruction
1. The subject matter – facts, people, places,
events, dates;
2. Interpretation;
3. Research and analytical skills students must
learn to find information and create their
interpretations
Rationale
Interdisciplinary nature of the discipline
There is no single yes-or-no answer in history
You should know the context to be able to
make a sound judgment
Primary sources
Created at the time of the event, especially
by those taking part in the events:
Diaries, letters, newspapers, magazine
articles, tape recordings, pictures, maps,
government documents, court records,
business records, church records
Secondary sources
Created after the event – usually by scholars
Books, book reviews, scholarly journal
articles
Put facts into context, citations of primary
sources
The 7 Steps of Research
Identify and develop your topic
Find background information
Use the online catalog to find books
Find periodicals articles (print and electronic)
Find Internet resources
Evaluate what you have found
Cite what you find using a standard format for your
bibliography
Step 1: Identify and develop
your topic
State your topic as a question.
Find keywords that describe your topic
Test the keywords
Step 2. Background information
Common background sources
Why background sources?
How to use background sources
effectively?
Bibliographies
Step 2. Continued
Print
Encyclopedia Britannica
Oxford Reference Online
Dynasties of the World
A Dictionary of World History
Oxford Dictionary of the Classical World
The Oxford Companion to World War II
Step 3. Books
Why do we consult books?
Authorship
Analysis
Multiple viewpoints
Additional resources
“A historical monograph is the culmination of years spent
reading, researching in the field, plowing through
musty tomes, and pouring over dusty, fragile
manuscripts.”
Joel. D. Kitchens
Step 3. Continued
On-line catalog
Ebrary
Step 4. Find articles
Print Periodicals
Electronic Periodicals
Electronic Journals Portal
Databases:
CEEOL
DOAJ
EBSCO
JSTOR
ProQuest Central
Step 5. Find Internet resources
Search engines
Directories
Discipline Specific Resources
Step 6. Evaluate
S – Scope – are all aspects of the topic covered
T – Treatment – is the information free from bias
A – Authority – are the authors qualified to provide
this information
R – Relevance – does it address your topic
T – Timeliness – Is the information current for your
purpose
Step 7. Cite
Most common styles of citing
Modern Language Association (MLA)
American Psychological Association (APA)
Searching: How to be Effective?
Narrow your search
Be more specific
Use phrases
Add a discriminating or qualifying word or phrase
Broaden your search
Use lower case
Use truncation
Ask a Librarian
At Reference/Circulation desk
Virtual Reference
Monday-Friday
9.00-19.00
By e-mail:
[email protected]
By phone:
888 341/354
And more …
Thank you!
Contact us:
Tel.: (73) 888 341/354
E-mail:[email protected]