Transcript Gale

Gale Cengage Learning
Research Material
Tips to Database Navigation
There is a Gale Research Link on the SMS Library Web Page.
The collection of Gale Databases looks like the screen shot below. Notice a couple of
things:
* The default (little radio button with green dot) is set to Selected Cross-Searchable Products
* All Data bases are selected by default (green check in the Select All option)
* You can launch your search from here OR select a specific database
Many Middle School students may want to scroll down to the Student Resource
Center –Gold or the Junior Reference Collection database to begin their search.
Spanish speaking patrons may prefer to search in the Informe database. Each database
has a brief description of what it contains.
The table below gives an idea of what some of the different
databases offer and the suggested age of the researcher.
This chart is designed as a comparison of 5 different databases. It reads like the following:
~
Anything contained in the Junior Reference collection is also in InfoTrac Junior and
DISCovering collection.
~
Anything in InfoTrac Junior or DISCovering databases is in InfoTrac Student.
~
Student Resource Center Gold contains all the information in the other 4 databases
If you decide to conduct research in Student Resource Center Gold the page will
open to a Basic Search window. You will also see a list of Popular Search Topics.
Basic Search allows you to conduct a straight foreword search in either a search box or
by selecting from the Topics List.
A Subject Search is from subject
headings assigned to highly relevant articles
and results in the smallest amount of hits.
An Entire Document Search searches
all index fields and yields the largest amount
of hits.
A Keyword Search searches: subject
headings; article citations; and, the 1st 50
words of an article. The yield is a “happy
medium” between the two search options
above.
Subject Guide Searching is used when you want to browse a list of: people, topics
and locations or narrow a broad topic.
This search subdivides the topic yielding
a list of subject headings related to the
topic.
For example: if you type in the word
“China” you would get subdivisions of that
topic
Advance Search provides search fields that are NOT available in other areas of the
database
Example of options available in the
Keyword drop down menu. You can
include the search options you want.
You can also combine the search fields.
The Document
Type drop down
option is also
extremely
comprehensive
If you choose to launch your search from the main window of Gale Databases there are
some interesting features that are noteworthy.
The sample below shows that the search is for the topic: Smithsonian
7038 results from Magazines are shown. Clicking on Academic Journals would give
you several thousand articles to read. There are 131 Books and 11,832 News stories as
well as 186 Multimedia from which to select. Clicking on the title: Hubble parts’ new
home will take you to the actual article.
There are some features on the page to note. First of all, notice that the page is
displaying magazine articles, because the Magazine tab is larger than the other ones,
AND it is a different color. Also notice there is a Tools window that provides different
options for printing, sending, getting help from the dictionary, etc. You can highlight
words or small sections of the article and click on the Listen icon if you want to hear the
text.
A Big Concept to keep in
mind is with regard to
BOOKMARKED items. . .
They are saved ONLY UNTIL
you close the session. Once
you close out, the marked
items will be gone.
If you want to save marked
items for a period of time,
then go up to the task bar
and click on LOGIN so you
can establish your own
account.
For further assistance, come to the library for help.
ppt
created by
p.christensen
February 2010