1 00:00:00,860 --> 00:00:04,815 >> For strategy number 2, to dig deeper. 2 00:00:04,815 --> 00:00:07,970 We're going to pick up where we left off in strategy 1. 3 00:00:07,970 --> 00:00:10,110 We had identified these keywords in 4 00:00:10,110 --> 00:00:14,250 Google Scholar that look really relevant to my topic. 5 00:00:14,250 --> 00:00:18,750 I have narrowed down to Third Space, Higher Education, 6 00:00:18,750 --> 00:00:21,960 Teacher Identity, these are all the kind of articles 7 00:00:21,960 --> 00:00:25,635 that I want to take a look at related to my research. 8 00:00:25,635 --> 00:00:29,085 I'm going to copy that phrase, 9 00:00:29,085 --> 00:00:32,744 and instead of putting it into U search, 10 00:00:32,744 --> 00:00:35,970 I'm going to click on "Databases". 11 00:00:35,970 --> 00:00:41,690 Databases are collections of 12 00:00:41,690 --> 00:00:46,790 scholarly journals and articles that are specific, 13 00:00:46,790 --> 00:00:50,310 sometimes by discipline, other times more general, 14 00:00:50,310 --> 00:00:54,890 and this will give us good quality scholarly peer reviewed material. 15 00:00:54,890 --> 00:00:57,335 That means material that's published, 16 00:00:57,335 --> 00:01:01,590 that has been reviewed by experts before it was published. 17 00:01:01,590 --> 00:01:05,060 I just want to show you this little diagram about information. 18 00:01:05,060 --> 00:01:09,410 At the California State University Chico library website, 19 00:01:09,410 --> 00:01:14,155 they have this great diagram about information structure. 20 00:01:14,155 --> 00:01:17,415 The information is stored, 21 00:01:17,415 --> 00:01:19,955 there is a hierarchical structure to it, 22 00:01:19,955 --> 00:01:23,420 so if this database was Google Scholar, 23 00:01:23,420 --> 00:01:26,240 we were finding scholarly journals and we were 24 00:01:26,240 --> 00:01:30,160 finding books in Google Scholar. 25 00:01:30,160 --> 00:01:32,070 Then when we search books, 26 00:01:32,070 --> 00:01:35,085 there's individual books where we found journal, 27 00:01:35,085 --> 00:01:37,005 there were individual articles. 28 00:01:37,005 --> 00:01:38,625 In Google Scholar, it's 29 00:01:38,625 --> 00:01:41,420 deceptive because it takes you right down to the article, 30 00:01:41,420 --> 00:01:44,630 it doesn't really show you this in-between space. 31 00:01:44,630 --> 00:01:46,490 In the library catalog, 32 00:01:46,490 --> 00:01:48,965 if you consider that the big database, 33 00:01:48,965 --> 00:01:52,255 you find scholarly journals and books, 34 00:01:52,255 --> 00:01:57,260 but you also find popular magazines and newspapers and multimedia. 35 00:01:57,260 --> 00:02:01,700 So you find a collection of everything that the library owns. 36 00:02:01,700 --> 00:02:05,680 Popular magazines and newspapers like New York Times, 37 00:02:05,680 --> 00:02:14,810 economics journals like any of those popular magazine topics, 38 00:02:14,810 --> 00:02:17,540 People Magazine, National Geographic, 39 00:02:17,540 --> 00:02:22,175 Time Magazine, those are all considered popular resources. 40 00:02:22,175 --> 00:02:27,530 They are not to the standard of peer-reviewed scholarly materials 41 00:02:27,530 --> 00:02:30,919 because there is not an editorial process 42 00:02:30,919 --> 00:02:33,375 where that material is peer-reviewed. 43 00:02:33,375 --> 00:02:35,575 There's an editor to the journal, 44 00:02:35,575 --> 00:02:39,895 and then there are journalists who may or may not be experts in the topic. 45 00:02:39,895 --> 00:02:43,415 When you're in a scholarly journal, it's researchers, 46 00:02:43,415 --> 00:02:46,955 experts that are writing articles about their own research, 47 00:02:46,955 --> 00:02:50,165 so you have a different level of quality. 48 00:02:50,165 --> 00:02:55,250 In your case, your instructor may ask you to have mostly scholarly journals, 49 00:02:55,250 --> 00:03:00,470 or peer-reviewed articles, and that would be just in this group, 50 00:03:00,470 --> 00:03:03,170 not in magazines, not in multimedia, 51 00:03:03,170 --> 00:03:05,510 and not in books, and e-books. 52 00:03:05,510 --> 00:03:09,170 Some faculty do consider books scholarly if it's 53 00:03:09,170 --> 00:03:13,325 an edited volume and there's editors and peer-review process involved, 54 00:03:13,325 --> 00:03:16,320 but not all the time. 55 00:03:16,760 --> 00:03:20,090 If we go back to the library homepage, 56 00:03:20,090 --> 00:03:22,550 oops, let's go back here for a minute. 57 00:03:22,550 --> 00:03:24,950 I'm going to click again on "Databases". 58 00:03:24,950 --> 00:03:27,560 There's two ways that you can search by databases, 59 00:03:27,560 --> 00:03:29,915 alphabetically or by subject. 60 00:03:29,915 --> 00:03:32,959 If I click "Education" by subject, 61 00:03:32,959 --> 00:03:38,230 it will show me all of the databases that have education content in them. 62 00:03:38,230 --> 00:03:39,960 They're all could be very different, 63 00:03:39,960 --> 00:03:41,640 this is education children's books, 64 00:03:41,640 --> 00:03:43,960 this is education psychology. 65 00:03:43,960 --> 00:03:48,650 This top one is the one that's recommended by the librarian, 66 00:03:48,650 --> 00:03:50,585 education full-text and ERIC. 67 00:03:50,585 --> 00:03:53,360 But instead of searching these individually, 68 00:03:53,360 --> 00:03:56,420 I'm going to show you a database that you can search 69 00:03:56,420 --> 00:03:59,915 across many different topics and disciplines. 70 00:03:59,915 --> 00:04:01,865 We're going to click on E, 71 00:04:01,865 --> 00:04:06,000 and we're going to come down to EBSCOhost Databases. 72 00:04:06,290 --> 00:04:08,765 When you open up this window, 73 00:04:08,765 --> 00:04:13,265 you will see a list of different sub databases within that. 74 00:04:13,265 --> 00:04:16,664 Academic Search ultimate is a great database, 75 00:04:16,664 --> 00:04:18,330 it covers a lot of different topics. 76 00:04:18,330 --> 00:04:21,500 I find a lot of things in there no matter what topic I'm searching, 77 00:04:21,500 --> 00:04:23,330 I always find things there. 78 00:04:23,330 --> 00:04:26,305 I'm just going to select a few here. 79 00:04:26,305 --> 00:04:30,735 I'm going to go down to APA, 80 00:04:30,735 --> 00:04:34,020 and I'm going to go down to ease. 81 00:04:34,020 --> 00:04:36,109 There's other ones that I would select, 82 00:04:36,109 --> 00:04:37,910 but just for time, 83 00:04:37,910 --> 00:04:39,900 I'm just going to select a few of them here. 84 00:04:39,900 --> 00:04:44,460 You can take a look at these depending on your topic. 85 00:04:45,100 --> 00:04:50,215 I'm not going to do that one because it only goes up to 1983. 86 00:04:50,215 --> 00:04:53,205 I'm going to just select those, 87 00:04:53,205 --> 00:04:55,590 and then I'm going to continue, 88 00:04:55,590 --> 00:05:01,885 now if I go to Google Scholar and I bring these keywords in, 89 00:05:01,885 --> 00:05:06,500 you will see that we don't find nearly as many articles. 90 00:05:06,500 --> 00:05:12,120 I found 1,500 articles in Google Scholar and four here. 91 00:05:13,010 --> 00:05:18,440 What I normally do when I'm in these databases is I use advanced search. 92 00:05:18,440 --> 00:05:21,140 I use the big search term in 93 00:05:21,140 --> 00:05:24,100 the library catalog and I use it in Google Scholar. 94 00:05:24,100 --> 00:05:26,500 But now I'm going to break up my key terms, 95 00:05:26,500 --> 00:05:31,185 so I could do practice here in this first field, 96 00:05:31,185 --> 00:05:34,700 and I don't need to use quotation marks because 97 00:05:34,700 --> 00:05:39,235 it's already in its own special field. 98 00:05:39,235 --> 00:05:43,300 Practice, they're also recommending strategies or approaches, 99 00:05:43,300 --> 00:05:47,720 so I'm going to select that because those ORs will broaden my search. 100 00:05:47,720 --> 00:05:49,990 Those three words are similar, 101 00:05:49,990 --> 00:05:51,920 and I didn't think of those words, 102 00:05:51,920 --> 00:05:55,190 but this will help me broaden my search a little more. 103 00:05:55,190 --> 00:05:56,990 Then here's the word AND, 104 00:05:56,990 --> 00:06:02,120 and I'm going to put in "third 105 00:06:02,120 --> 00:06:08,040 space" and third space theory professionals, 106 00:06:08,040 --> 00:06:10,860 I'm just going to select third space which will be broader. 107 00:06:10,860 --> 00:06:13,220 Once you put the professionals in there it I'll 108 00:06:13,220 --> 00:06:16,015 only find third space professionals. 109 00:06:16,015 --> 00:06:22,070 Then I could also put in there language, 110 00:06:22,070 --> 00:06:23,960 or I could put professionals down here, 111 00:06:23,960 --> 00:06:26,390 so let's do professional separate, 112 00:06:26,390 --> 00:06:29,780 and you'll see, does it give me any other options? 113 00:06:29,780 --> 00:06:31,145 Professionalism, 114 00:06:31,145 --> 00:06:36,570 professional development, professional identity, let's do that one. 115 00:06:36,770 --> 00:06:41,500 Now I'm going to search and instead of four, I'm getting 23. 116 00:06:41,500 --> 00:06:43,820 I can play around with my keywords that might 117 00:06:43,820 --> 00:06:46,415 be because of that identity word there, 118 00:06:46,415 --> 00:06:51,180 so I'm going to 206. 119 00:06:51,180 --> 00:06:52,740 This is getting closer, 120 00:06:52,740 --> 00:06:54,960 now I'm looking at Faculty, 121 00:06:54,960 --> 00:06:56,970 I'm looking at Teacher Education, 122 00:06:56,970 --> 00:06:58,755 I'm looking at Third Space, 123 00:06:58,755 --> 00:07:05,565 so this search looks better than what I was getting before. 124 00:07:05,565 --> 00:07:08,600 Down here on the bottom left-hand side of 125 00:07:08,600 --> 00:07:12,545 the column in the faceted searching menu at the very bottom, 126 00:07:12,545 --> 00:07:18,185 it's telling me how many articles it's finding in each of those databases. 127 00:07:18,185 --> 00:07:23,510 Academic Search Premier, it's finding 66 articles, which is good, 128 00:07:23,510 --> 00:07:30,580 ERIC 55, so these are my top two databases for this type of search. 129 00:07:30,580 --> 00:07:34,875 I can click on the title, 130 00:07:34,875 --> 00:07:38,385 and then I can read the abstract, 131 00:07:38,385 --> 00:07:41,105 I can look for additional keywords, 132 00:07:41,105 --> 00:07:45,210 and then I can download the PDF from here. 133 00:07:47,560 --> 00:07:51,485 Usually in the databases you have to do a second click, 134 00:07:51,485 --> 00:07:58,130 either an arrow or an open to download the actual article. 135 00:07:58,130 --> 00:08:00,320 On the right-hand menu, 136 00:08:00,320 --> 00:08:03,100 there is a cite similar to Google Scholar, 137 00:08:03,100 --> 00:08:06,560 so up here's my APA citation for that, 138 00:08:06,560 --> 00:08:12,185 but again, you have to check it that it may not be correct. 139 00:08:12,185 --> 00:08:19,415 Other databases that you might want to search go to the letter J for JSTOR, 140 00:08:19,415 --> 00:08:25,340 go to P for Project MUSE or to other good databases for my topic. 141 00:08:25,340 --> 00:08:28,550 I would go there and I would maybe look at these, 142 00:08:28,550 --> 00:08:32,420 so I would do Practices or Strategies or Approaches, and Third Space, 143 00:08:32,420 --> 00:08:37,890 and Professional and see what I find in those databases.