Library final

Pataasin ang iyong marka sa homework at exams ngayon gamit ang Quizwiz!

You want to search for articles that discuss Chinese ceramics during the Sung Dynasty. You've learned that an alternate spelling of Sung Dynasty is Song Dynasty, and you're not sure whether the term ceramics or pottery would be a better choice. As discussed in Chapter 3, which example of a nested search would best fit your topic?

(sung dynasty OR song dynasty) AND (ceramics OR pottery)

It's important to know where to find a book in the Library. You heard about a book called Thinking, Fast and Slow. Search for that book now in Quick Search to answer the following questions: What is the call number of this book? Now use Call Numbers in Parks Library to find this book's location. On which Floor or Tier is this book located?

- BF441 .K238 2011 - Floor 3

Define... QuickSearch WorldCat Google Books

- books, ebooks, journals, articles & other scholarly materials from ISU Lib; all books available on your topic that you can check out. - materials in libraries nearest you; libraries nearest you that own copies of your textbook; books owned by any library that you can ILL for free. - ebooks you can download or buy; scanned full-text or excerpted books to read online; free ebooks for your Android or iPhone.

Which of the dates listed below is the best indicator of the currency of a web page's content?

A date listed after "Last updated on..."

What does adding AND to your search do? Adding OR? Adding NOT?

AND will show results containing both search terms. OR: broadens a keyword search NOT: restricts a keyword search

Where could your roommate go for help on... the academic success center, library, or student counseling services? learning time management skills finding a style guide to cite sources correctly for a paper when personal problems make it difficult to concentrate on coursework learning strategies for taking tests

Academic Success Center Library Student counseling services Academic success center

Using Quick Search's first drop-down menu, which search strategy is the most efficient and effective to find the following: Anything & everything possible with your search terms. Books on skiing for physical fitness. A DVD about the architect Frank Lloyd Wright. A map showing ancient sites of the Maya people

All items Books and more Audio Visual Maps

Let's say you want to find an article called Rating the YouTube Indian: Viewer Ratings of Native American Portrayals on a Viral Video Site. On the Article Indexes & Databases page, find Academic Search Premier and click to enter and search that index. In the search box, type the name of the article listed above and click search. It's important to understand how to interpret journal article citations. What is the name of the journal in which this article was published?

American Indian Quarterly

Are these plagerised? Original source material: Designs intended to address the safety needs of motorists are viewed as being at odds with those aimed at enhancing the safety of pedestrians and cyclists. Dumbaugh, Eric and Li, Wenhao (2011). 'Designing for the Safety of Pedestrians, Cyclists, and Motorists in Urban Environments', Journal of the American Planning Association, 77: 1, 69 — 88; quote from p. 69 Attempt A: It is a challenge to address the safety needs of pedestrians with those of motorists and cyclists, since they are often in conflict with each other. Dumbaugh, Eric and Li, Wenhao (2011) 'Designing for the Safety of Pedestrians, Cyclists, and Motorists in Urban Environments', Journal of the American Planning Association, 77: 1, 69 — 88; quote from p. 69 Attempt B: City and roadway planning design must consider what Dumbaugh and Li call the "safety needs" (1) of diverse users, whether drivers or pedestrians. Dumbaugh, Eric and Li, Wenhao(2011) 'Designing for the Safety of Pedestrians, Cyclists, and Motorists in Urban Environments', Journal of the American Planning Association, 77: 1, 69 — 88; quote from p. 69

Attempt A is example of plagiarism Attempt B is correctly paraphrased

Cite an online journal or magazine? Hint?

Author name. (date of publication) article title journal name in italics, volume(issue number): page numbers Accessed month day, year doi: link to website Accessed...

Cite a book? hint?

Author name. (date of publication). Title of book italicized. Place of publication: publisher. Shortest

Cite a newspaper article? Hint?

Author name. (date of publication). Title of the article. Title of the newspaper italicized, page number column and measurement. column number and measurement

Cite a book chapter? Hint?

Author names. (date of publication). Chapter title. In editor/author of entire book (ed.), Book title italicized (specific page numbers of the chapter). Place of publication: publisher. In... and (ed.)

Cite a journal or magazine? Hint?

Author names. Date of pulication. Article title. Journal name, volume number(issue number): article page numbers. Volume(issue)

Cite a conference proceedings paper? Hint?

Authors. (date of publication). NAme of presentation or paper. Paper presented at name of conference: subtitle for specific conference. Retrieved from link is paper is available online Paper presented at...

According to Chapter 1, which one of the following is your best option for finding background information?

Books, encyclopedia articles, and authoritative websites

What are some criteria that can refine your search results in Quick Search?

By collection or creator, not by popularity or number of versions owned

You're working on a group project and need the book Understanding Immigration Law, by Kevin R. Johnson. Search for this book in WorldCat. Which is the nearest library to ISU that owns this book? (You may need to enter 50011 in the zip code box if you are accessing WorldCat from outside of Ames.)

Drake University Law Library

what does the "peer" refer to in "peer reviewed article" as defined in Chapter 1?

Experts in the same subject as the author critiqued the article

True or false: Free information has no value. Only paywalled materials have value. Value may be contextual depending on what you need. Value can mean usefulness. All kinds of information can have value.

False False True True True

To find information on the effects of the French revolution on Europe's economy, which one of the choices below could best be used as search terms for finding information on the topic?

French Revolution and Europe and economy

Google or Google Scholar? A weather forecast for Ames, Iowa for the next four days. A report on the effects of past years' weather on the Iowa soybean harvest. A list of past and future host cities for the Olympic Games. In-depth analysis on the economic impact of past Olympic Games on their host cities.

Google Google Scholaar Google Google Scholar

What is the difference between Google and Google Scholar?

Google searches different types of websites, but Google Scholar searches only scholarly materials.

According to the Chapter, which of the following is important to consider when getting started on a research paper?

How much information do you need for your project

As described in Chapter 1, which ONE of the following best characterizes what is meant by "scholarly information"?

Information content produced in and for academic settings

According to Chapter 2, is a website with a top level domain of .org automatically trustworthy, or does its content need to be evaluated?

It needs to be evaluated because domain tells you where a site comes from but doesn't guarantee quality.

Academic Search Premier offers many Search Options on its front page as ways to focus your search results. Which three of the following options are offered on that page?

Limit by published date Limit results to full text items Limit to peer reviewed items only

Where would you look for each of the different types of information listed below? Look for background information in ................... Look for statistical information in ....................... Look for subject-focused information in ............. Look for news and general information in .........

Look for background information in ...................books and encyclopedias Look for statistical information in .......................government sources Look for subject-focused information in .............journal articles Look for news and general information in .........newspaper articles

Using what you know about Wikipedia contributors from this chapter, give two reasons why you might want to use an additional source.

Majority of Wikipedia contributors do not have advanced degrees. Wikipedia articles are not traditionally peer reviewed.

What is the main reason a sponsored link website gets placed at the top of search engine results?

Money - the search engine company is paid to place it at the top.

Indicate whether the description fits controlled vocab or natural language searches. Whole sentences can be used Uses pre-defined terms Uses everyday language More likely to yield relevant results

Natural language Controlled vocab Natural language Controlled vocab

You've read in Chapter 5 that common knowledge does not have to be cited in your scholarly work. For each of the following examples, indicate whether it's common knowledge as defined in Chapter 5, or needs to be cited. Women are nearly one half of the US workforce, yet hold less than one fourth of all jobs in science, technology, engineering, and math. Many critics believe that Sigmund Freud's theories on psychoanalysis are sexist and unscientific. The famous naturalist Charles Darwin was born in 1809. Scientist Alexander Fleming won the Nobel Prize for his discovery of penicillin.

Need to cite Need to cite Common knowledge Common knowledge

You created a fan video on the Rolling Stones for your music appreciation class and got an A on the project. You've used photographs you found on the web along with one of their songs and cited them appropriately. Did you violate copyright law?

No, the video was created for educational purposes and thus probably Fair Use

Paraphrased correctly? Original source material: "D.H.J. Polymath, an Internet-based collaborative problem-solving project of mathematicians, began life on the blog of Timothy Gowers, a University of Cambridge winner of the Fields Medal, mathematics' most coveted prize. In a blog post in January 2009, Gowers asked whether spontaneous online collaborations could crack hard mathematical problems—and if they could do so in the open, laying the creative process out for the world to see. Web-based scientific collaborations and even "crowdsourcing" are now common, but this one would be different. In typical online collaborations, scientists each perform a small amount of research that contributes to a larger project, Gowers pointed out. In some cases, citizen-scientists such as bird-watchers or amateur astronomers collectively can make significant contributions. For a first experiment, Gowers chose the so-called density Hales-Jewett theorem. This problem, Gowers says, is akin to "playing a sort of solitaire tic-tac-toe and trying to lose." Mathematicians have known since 1991 that the theorem was true, but the existing proof used sophisticated tools from other branches of math. Gowers challenged his blog's readers to help him find a more elementary proof, a problem generally considered quite hard. The project took off a lot faster than Gowers expected. Within six weeks, he announced a solution." Your roommate wrote: In 2009, award-winning mathematician Timothy Gowers blogged about a new way to solve difficult mathematical problems. An article by Davide Castelvecchi1 describes how Gowers proposed leveraging the power of the Internet by inviting interested mathematicians to participate in "spontaneous online collaborations" and post responses via the web to a difficult problem on his blog. Besides solving problems, another goal Gowers wanted to achieve through this experiment was to show online the actual problem-solving processes that advanced mathematicians might use. In a sense, it is as if the online project allows interested parties from across the world to look into the classroom of gifted mathematicians and watch them at work. 1. Davide Castelvecchi. "Problem Solved, LOL: A Complex Tic-Tac-Toe Puzzle Falls Thanks to Blog Comments." Scientific American Magazine. March 17, 2010. Online: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=problem-solved-tic-tac-toe-blog.

Paraphrased correctly - true to the source and appropriately reworded and cited.

For each item below, indicate if it describes Open, Paywalled, or both types of resource. the resource requires you to login the resource is scholarly you can view the resource regardless of your affiliation

Paywalled Could be both Open

Why is peer review an important element of the scholarly conversation?

Peer review draws on the expertise of others to strengthen research

You are researching the history of Iowa just after becoming a state in 1846. One of the information sources you have found on this is a transcript of an 1846 speech given by an Iowa politician. Is this source primary or secondary, and why?

Primary because it was created immediately after the speech was given.

would you use quick search or article index to find ... articles in a wide range of subject areas. a comprehensive set of articles on your in-depth research topic search features that are customized to your specific subject area general search features and quick access to full-text

Quick Search Article Index Article Index Quick Search

For each example below, match the description to either quick information seeking or researching Looking for current stock market prices Using three different article indexes to find articles Reading the local newspaper for this week's weather Requesting a journal article from Interlibrary Loan

Quick info Research Quick info Research

If you discover the Library does not own the book you need, which of the following is the best option for you to access the book?

Request the book through the Interlibrary Loan service

Other article indexes keep things simple on their front pages, but offer more options through an Advanced Search screen. Let's look at PsycINFO as an example. Which three choices below are offered on the Advanced Search page of PsycINFO?

Search by methodology Search by language Search peer reviewed items only

Using Advanced Search in Google Scholar would allow you to:

Search with controlled vocabulary set by Google or search only case law

Why might you want to use secondary sources for a project or paper?

Secondary sources may provide useful analyses of your topic

You and your roommate both need to find scholarly materials for a paper on the topic of using Twitter's daily trending topics to market lifestyle products to young adults. You've been told to use a scholarly article index. Your roommate uses the following search terms: using Twitter's daily trending topics to market lifestyle products to young adults but gets poor results, including some items that don't look relevant. According to Chapter 1, what would be the best next step to ensure that you both get more relevant results?

Simplify your search terms to search only key concepts

You want to find books and articles about the symbolism used by American folk artists. Since this is a complex topic, you want to break it down into its main concepts to help identify keywords that could help you search, as described in Chapter 1. Which of the following are your three best choices for this topic: Artists (or painters, sculptors, printmakers, etc.) Symbolism (or metaphors, emblems, themes) Folk art (or traditional art, outsider art, etc.) American (or United States, U.S. regions, etc.) Books (or articles, journals, reports)

Symbolism (or metaphors, emblems, themes) Folk art (or traditional art, outsider art, etc.) American (or United States, U.S. regions, etc.)

Using the evaluation criteria in Chapter 2, go to this website and evaluate it: http://www.usda.gov/wps/portal/usda/knowyourfarmer?navid=KNOWYOURFARMER. What are the credentials for the author(s) of the website?

The authors are staff members of the US Dept. of Agriculture.

You're writing a paper on development of "supercenter" retail stores. You've gotten information for your paper from a book, an article, a website, and even a graphic from a website. Which of the following do you need to cite?

The book, article, website, and graphic all need to be cited.

Which three choices below are reasons you might be not allowed access to an article?

The library does not own a copy of this article. This article is part of a subscription journal. You are off-campus and not logged into your ISU account. This is only available for individual subscription.

what is a potential benefit for researchers in using social media in addition to traditional scholarly publishing?

They may reach different audiences through social media.

What is the main purpose of an index as discussed in Chapter 4?

To identify & provide access to journal articles in a subject area.

What is the main purpose of subject headings?

To organize library subjects by their formats To organize resources according to subject areas

TRUE or FALSE. As an ISU student, you can access paywalled articles the Library owns in your Google Scholar search results. Google Scholar equally covers all subject areas. You will need to login to Google Scholar to use it on campus. You can find a variety of scholarly materials with Google Scholar.

True False False True

True or false? When you create an original work and put a Creative Commons attribution license on it, you are still the copyright holder. In order to be a copyright holder you must register with the U.S. Copyright Office.

True false

According to Chapter 5, which of the following must you do when correctly paraphrasing? True or false Cite the source. Agree with the original author. Use quote marks when you change the original author's words. Use quote marks if you use some of the same words as the original author.

True false false true

To find if the Library owns the item listed below using Quick Search, what would you type in the search box, and what option would you choose in the third drop-down menu? Stevens, K.A., and Parrish, J.M. (2004). Neck posture, dentition, and feeding strategies in Jurassic sauropod dinosaurs. IN V.Tidwell and K.Carpenter (Eds.), Thunder-Lizards: The Sauropodomorph Dinosaurs. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

Type Thunder-Lizards: The Sauropodomorph Dinosaurs and search " in title"

Which two of the following choices help you easily find recent articles in your results?

Use the facets to select a year. Sort results by date instead of relevance

According to Chapter 5, what is the definition of plagiarism?

Using someone else's words or ideas without giving credit to that person

Which one of the finding tools discussed in the Chapter is described in the statement below? Best choice for finding up-to-date information, but misses most subscription-based scholarly resources

Web search engine

Now you want to upload your Rolling Stones fan video to YouTube. Would you be violating copyright?

Yes, because you didn't get copyright permissions plus the audience and purpose is no longer educational

Now, click on the relevant subject heading that you identified in the previous question and analyze your search results. Which of the following best describes your new results:

You focused your results to be on this exact subject

What does the following citation represent? Kahneman, D. (2011). Thinking, Fast and Slow. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux.

a book

What does the following citation represent? Chacón, Hilda. (2009). Political Cartoons in Cyberspace: Rearticulating Mexican and U.S. Cultural Identity in the Global Era. IN Linda Egan and Mary K. Long. (Ed.) Mexico Reading the United States. (pp. 219-251). Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt UP.

a book chapter

What does the following citation represent? Camerini, G. and R. Groppali (2014). Landfill restoration and biodiversity: A case of study in Northern Italy. Waste Management & Research, 32(8): 782-790. Accessed August 8, 2016, doi:10.1177/0734242X14545372.

a journal article

What does the following citation represent? Easterlin, Richard A. (1961). The American baby boom in historical perspective. The American Economic Review, 51(5): 869-911.

a journal article

Using the citation below, match the citation elements to the correct answers. You need to answer ALL elements correctly to get credit on this question. Turino, Thomas. (2009). Four Fields of Music Making and Sustainable Living. World of Music, 51(1): 95-117. Turino, Thomas. 2009 Four Fields of Music Making and Sustainable Living World of Music 51 1 95-117

article author publication date article title journal title volume issue Page number

In the citation below, what does Difference Engines and Other Infernal Devices: History According to Steampunk represent? Steffen, H. (1999). Difference Engines and Other Infernal Devices: History According to Steampunk. Extrapolation: A Journal of Science Fiction and Fantasy, 40(3): 244-54.

article title

which search strategy is the most efficient and effective to find items written by Glaser and Reynolds items that include the words Shakespeare and acting in the title items about the natural history of New Zealand items written by the Museum of Modern Art

as author/creator In the title In subject as author/creator

You've evaluated a website and found information about the authors that shows their many qualifications are relevant to the websites topic. According to Chapter 2, this suggests that the website is ...

authoritative in terms of credentials.

This statement: "Geologists have just discovered signs from about 3900 years ago of a huge flood of China's Yellow River" needs to be cited. According to Chapter 5, why is this so?

because it is a result of new research

As an information finding tool, Quick Search is the best tool for finding

books and more that a library owns

According to Chapter 5, select three choices below that best complete this sentence: Using and citing sources ...

builds off of the work of others advances the scholarly conversation helps prevent plagiarism

For the citation listed below, match the citation elements to the correct answers. Braun, A.R., & Hoede, H. (2000) Farmer participatory research in Latin America: four cases. In W.W. Stur, et al. (Eds.) Working with Farmers: The Key to the Adoption of Forage Technologies. (pp. 32-53). Canberra: Australian Center for International Research. Braun, A.R., & Hoede, H. 2000 Farmer participatory research in Latin America: four cases. W.W. Stur, et al. Working with Farmers: The Key to the Adoption of Forage Technologies pp. 32-53 Canberra Australian Center for International Research

chapter author 2000 publication year chapter title editors book title page numbers place of publication publisher

During class, your professor mentions an article called Making as morality. From the Library homepage's list of Articles Indexes and Databases, find the Design and Applied Arts Index and search for the title to locate an article published in a journal issue dated December 2014-January 2015. Which one of the following is a subject term used for this article?

education

Indicate true / false for the following statements. Items in the public domain are.... protected by federal copyright laws available for free use by anyone often US government documents available for re-use without giving credit

false true true true

What are some strategies you can use to control the release or use of your personal information online? For each statement below, indicate whether it is a good strategy or not. Read user agreements and privacy policies before creating accounts. Take advantage of options for minimizing advertisements in an app or service. Use the same password for as many sites as possible so you don't forget it. Encourage your friends to tag you in Facebook photos.

good good not good not good

Identify three common features of scholarly information

includes footnotes and references qualifications of author included has gone through peer review

According to Chapter 2, which two examples of search topics below would be most likely to have useful results in Wikipedia?

information on how Pokémon Go was developed information about the popular Broadway musical Hamilton

Why might you want to use primary sources for a project or paper?

it may be useful to document a historic event with perspectives from that time

What is the benefit of using a Creative Commons license?

makes clear the conditions for reusing original work

Use Quick Search to search for the book The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot. Click on the Details link of the book you just found. If you wanted to find more books that address ethical issues like the ones raised in this book, which link in the Details view should you click?

medical ethics

Match the following descriptions to the appropriate items: someone else's words or ideas used without credit law determines how authors' works can be re-used published works no longer protected by copyright someone else's information explained in your own words

plagiarism copyright public domain paraphrase

Truncation is a keyword search technique that helps you find useful variations of a term or terms. You want to find books on the topic of music and politics or political aspects of music. Where should you best truncate in this example?

politic* and music

You need to read a copy of Geology of the National Capital Region: field trip guidebook immediately, but all copies are checked out from ISU Library. What are your choices in Google Books for this title?

read scanned full-text online or download the free mobile ebook

When you're off-campus you need to log into ISU Library's scholarly databases and full-text journals. Logging into the Library website is...

required because the ISU Library pays a fee so ISU students and researchers can access paywalled databases and journals

What type of publication, scholarly or popular, do the descriptions on the left column represent? Usually include lengthy bibliographies Footnotes and bibliographies are rarely used Written for the general public Takes more time to produce because of review process

scholarly popular popular scholarly

You know that using style guides helps you prepare your footnotes and reference lists for your papers. According to Chapter 5, there are other good reasons to use a style guide. What is one of them?

style guides help you communicate with your peers within a specific subject discipline. help us communicate such things as: "Where did that idea come from?" "Which works were consulted?" "How was this research conducted - what were the steps taken?" "What page did that quoted passage come from?" "What is the basis for that conclusion?" "Where can I learn more about that topic?" "What support do you have for that claim?"

Based on what you know about the book, which search strategy should you choose for the middle drop-down menu?

that contain my query words starts with my exact phrase

Which of the following are points that can demonstrate the accuracy of a website?

the site was carefully edited and does not include grammatical errors

Knowing when the event you're researching happened is important because it helps you ...

to know how much information and what types of information may be available

Why is it important to cite other people's work in your research? True or false Citing sources advances the scholarly conversation. Your paper will look more important and its length will be increased. Citing sources allows you to use them without seeking copyright permission. Citing sources allows your readers to see where ideas you used originated.

true false false true

Chapter 5 discusses ways you can control use / re-use of your own scholarly creations. Indicate whether the statements below are true or false Your original works are automatically protected by copyright. You can choose the level of Creative Commons licensing you prefer. You can remix all other works that have Creative Commons licensing. You can hold copyright to your works for 17 years, then they will be automatically public domain

true true false false

Match the items below to the correct description, as described in Chapter 4: Typically includes all issues from one year Published on an ongoing basis at regular intervals A paper describing a research or scholarly topic A set of articles published together at the same time

volume journal article issue

match the three major finding tools to their STRENGTHS

web search engines: best choice for finding up-to-date information library discovery tools: best choice for finding what a specific library owns indexes: best choice for finding scholarly journal articles books & journals: not a finding tool, as defined in Chapter 1

match the three major finding tools to their WEAKNESSES

web search engines: misses most subscription- based scholarly resources library discovery tools: hard to focus your search indexes: may not include full-text books & journals: not a finding tool, as defined in Chapter 1

You are researching a human rights demonstration that happened a few days ago. Based on what you have learned about the flow of information, which of these types of information sources can you expect to find about this? photos or films from the event books describing the impact of the event scholarly articles analyzing the event news reports made about the event

yes no no yes

From the items below, which three choices best describe reasons to consider privacy when you put information about yourself online?

your professors or future employers may see your party photos your information may be copied, shared, or resold without your consent your information may reside in a place that you can't edit or control


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