2. Lesson Plan
• Introduction to the LRC
• What is an e-resource?
• Why do you need to use e-resources?
• How to find academic e-resources
3. Your Learning Resource Centre (LRC)
• Opening hours:
Monday to Friday 8am-9.30pm
Saturday 10am-6.45pm
• 10 resources at a time (only 2 DVDs)
• Different loan periods
• Fines for returning items late
• To borrow resources, you will need to register with the LRC
4. LRC Rules
We have 3 rules:
1. We are a silent study library, if you want to talk use the group work area
outside of the LRC
2. No eating or drinking (unless water)
3. Turn mobile devices onto silent, and take calls outside the LRC
5. Resources at INTO
• Books
• Journals
• Newspapers
• DVDs
The LRC catalogue can be accessed online:
http://library.ldn.uea.ac.uk/Heritage34/
• Access to academic e-resources
6. What is an e-resource?
• Sources of information that are stored on the Internet
• Examples:
– E-books
– E-journals
What is a journal?
A journal is a collection of articles containing reports of current research.
They are focused on a particular subject, e.g. Journal of Marketing or
Harvard Business Review, and they are published regularly e.g. weekly,
monthly or yearly.
7. Why use e-resources?
• Up-to-date information
• Short but detailed
• Focus on specific topics
• Peer-review
• You will be expected to use e-resources in your assignments
What is peer-review?
When an article has been evaluated and reviewed by other experts and
academics to make sure it is of a good academic standard.
8. Where do you find e-resources?
• Academic e-resources are very expensive
• You can’t access them for free on the Internet
• City University subscribes to them and you access them through the City
University Library website
9. Task 1: Use CityLibary Search to find an e-book
• Go to the City Uni library catalogue http://www.city.ac.uk/library
• Click on ‘Try our new library search’
• Search for an e-book related to your subject area
• Refine the ‘Content Type’ to ‘Book/e-book’
• ‘Refine your Search’ to ‘Items with full text online’
• Open an e-book
10. Task 2: Use CityLibrary Search to find an online
newspaper article
• Search for a newspaper article related to your subject area
• Refine the ‘Content Type’ to ‘Newspaper Article’
• ‘Refine your Search’ to ‘Items with full text online’
• Open a newspaper article
11. Task 3: Find an e-journal
• Go to the City Uni library catalogue
• Click on ‘Resources’ and then ‘Databases for You’
• Click ‘E-Journals A-Z’
• Open the journal and find the latest available issue
• Search for Harvard Business Review
• Open the journal and find the latest available edition
12. Task 4: Find your library subject guide
• Go to the City Uni library catalogue http://www.city.ac.uk/library
• Click on ‘Resources’ and then ‘Databases for You’
• Choose ‘Subject Guides’
• Choose your subject(s) and bookmark/favourite them
13. Task 5: Search a database
• Go to the City Uni library catalogue
• Click on ‘Resources’ and then ‘Databases for You’
• Click ‘Databases A-Z’
• Search for one of the databases recommended in your subject guide
• Find an article related to your subject area and open it
14. Choosing keywords
• What are the key concepts of your assignment title?
– Assignment:
Q: What is the impact of marketing junk-food to teenagers using social
media?
A: junk-food, marketing, social media, teenagers
• What alternative keywords do you need to use?
– Synonyms, related words, plurals, other spellings, abbreviations,
acronyms, broader and narrower terms
– Background reading, thesauri, encyclopaedia
– Make a list or mind map
15. Junk-food Marketing Social media Teenagers
Fast-food Adverts Facebook Teens
Convenience
food
Advertise Twitter Teen
Advertize Weibo Young adult
Advertising Web 2.0 Adolescent
Advertizing Young person
Promote Young people
Promotion
Sell
Selling
16. Search techniques
• Wildcard truncators:
– ? is used to replace a letter in a keyword when it has multiple spellings
– * is used to search for keywords with multiple endings
globali?ation SEARCH Will give results about globalisation
and globalization
librar* SEARCH
Will give results about library, libraries,
Librarian, Librarians and librarianship
17. Search techniques
• Phrase searching:
This will only give you results where the two words are next to each other
“global warming” SEARCH
20. Task 6: Keywords and search techniques
• Go to the City University homepage
• Go to ‘Resources’ then ‘Databases for You’
• Open the database ‘JSTOR’
• Test out the following searches, and compare the number of results:
– Search for social media, then search for “social media”
– Search for teenagers, then search for teen*
– Search for globalisation, then search for globali?ation
– Search for e-shopping, then search for online shopping
21. Putting it all together
Junk-food Marketing Social media Teenagers
Fast-food AND Advert* AND Facebook AND Teen*
OR OR OR OR
“Convenience
food”
Promot* Twitter “Young
adult”
OR OR OR
Sell* Weibo Adolescent*
OR OR
“Web 2.0” “Young
person”
Example: fast-food AND advert* AND “web 2.0” and teen*
Example: (fast-food OR “convenience food”) AND (advert* OR promot* OR sell*) AND
(facebook OR twitter OR weibo OR “Web 2.0) AND (teen* OR “young adult” OR
adolescent* OR “young person”)
23. City University Library
• You can study at City University Library
• Borrow 15 books
• Search their online catalogue
• 15 mins on the bus
• Long opening hours
See the LRC Helpsheet ‘Visiting City Library’
24. Help!
• Book a 1-2-1 or small group session with LRC Staff
• You can find further information and helpsheets on the LRC Moodle Page
• You can find helpsheets in the LRC
• You can contact the LRC staff to ask questions in person or by e-mail
LRC.london@uea.ac.uk
Notas do Editor
Gemma Bayliss Introduction to E-Resources INTO City