Research & Computing Help
Research Help
|
| |
- What? Librarians
will help with research questions related to choosing a research
topic or question, finding background information, choosing and
searching within Library catalogs and subscription resources,
finding books and articles at Macalester, requesting materials
from other libraries, finding statistics, evaluating research
resources, etc.
- When? Monday-Thursday
8am-9pm, Friday 8am-4:30pm, Saturday 1pm-5pm, Sunday 1pm-9pm.
Librarians can also help through email, consultation sessions,
and chat. See More Help in this section for additional information
about these types of help.
- Where? The Reference
Desk is located just inside the main doors of the
Library and to your right.
- More Help
|
|
|
| |
|
 |
Jean Beccone
Reference & Instruction Librarian
Beccone@macalester.edu
(651) 696-6398 |
 |
Beth Hillemann
Reference & Instruction Librarian
Hillemann@macalester.edu
(651) 696-6704
|
| |
Computing Help
|
| |
- What? CIT (Computing
and Information Technology) staff members and student employees
will help you with questions related to computer hardware and
software, the network, email, printing, passwords and online accounts,
etc.
- When? Monday-Thursday
8am-10pm, Friday 8am-4pm, Sunday 4pm-10pm.
- Where? The Computing
Help Desk office is located in the Humanities Building,
Room 310.
- More Help
- Find more information and help on the Computing
Help Desk Web page.
- Call the CIT (Computing & Information Technology)
Computing Help Desk at x6525 [Off Campus (651) 696-6525]
to speak directly to a consultant or leave a message.
- Email
the Computing Help Desk to report a problem or
ask a question.
- Use
CIT Documentation, instructional handouts explaining
systems and software, for help with computer, application,
program, and network questions.
|
Return to Top
Reference Resources
- What? Reference
materials include resources like dictionaries, encyclopedias,
atlases, almanacs, handbooks, statistical materials, etc.
- When? Use resources
in the Reference Collection to find background information on
your topic area when you start your research projects.
- Where? Reference
Collection Library Map. Use the CLICnet
Catalog to search for resources in the Reference
Collection. Print books are shelved under Library of Congress
Call Numbers, including both letters and numbers, based on their
subject matter.
|
| |
Selected Reference Resources for this Course |
| |
CLASSICAL STUDIES: a guide to the reference literature.
(Mac REF PA 91 J4 1996) Fred Jenkins.
Englewood, CO.: Libraries Unlimited, 1996.
This basic guide to reference sources in classical studies, although
somewhat dated, includes evluative annotations for all the sources
listed. Subject and author/title indexes are included. |
| |
DICTIONARY OF ART(Mac Ref N31 .D5 1996) 34 vols.
Jane Turner, ed. New York : Grove's Dictionaries, 1996.
This comprehensive encyclopedia of world visual arts, completed in
1996, contains entries on artists, periods, movements, countries,
cities, art forms, art patronage, etc. Volume 13 includes an extensive
discussion of ancient Greek pottery. Most articles are signed with
references. |
| |
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF WORLD ART(Mac Ref N31 E533) 17
vols. New York: McGraw Hill, 1959.
Comprehesive encyclopedia of world art. Half of each volume consists
of plates illustrating the articles within the volume. |
| |
| GUIDE TO THE ANCIENT WORLD: a dictionary of classical place names.
(Mac REF DE25 G72 1986)
Michael Grant. New York: H.W. Wilson, 1986. |
| |
GUIDE TO THE LITERATURE OF ART HISTORY(Mac Ref N380 A87
1980) Etta Arntzen and Robert Rainwater. Chicago: American
Library Association. 1980.
This annotated bibliography includes major works in art history published
in western languages between 1959 and 1977. There is a section on
ancient sculpture. |
| |
THE OXFORD CLASSICAL DICTIONARY (REF DE5 .O9 1996)
Simon Hornblower & Antony Spawforth (eds.), 3rd edition,
Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 1996.
Extensive dictionary of terms, places, people, ideas, and concepts
dealing with the ancient world. Each entry is written by a scholar,
with a brief list of resources to consult included in the entry. |
| |
Discipline/Topic Areas: Multidisciplinary (Arts
& Humanities, Social Sciences, Sciences)
Resource Type: Electronic Reference Resource (Subscription)
Publisher/Vendor: Oxford University Press
Description: Resource of reference materials
including about 100 dictionary, language reference, and subject
reference works published by Oxford University Press. Provides
database-wide searching, subject searching across sources, and
individual title searching. Included titles in the Classics section:
The Concise Oxford Companion to Classical Literature,
Who's Who in the Classical World.
|
Return to Top
Finding Books & More: Catalogs
Return to Top

Finding Articles & More : Indexes & Electronic
Collections
| |
| |
Selected Indexes & Electronic Collections
for this Course |
| |
Discipline/Topic Areas: Multidisciplinary (Arts
& Humanities, Social Sciences, Sciences)
Resource Type: Electronic Index (Subscription)
Publisher/Vendor Information: EBSCOhost, EBSCO
Publishing
Description: Provides full text for nearly 4,600
scholarly publications, including full text for more than 3,500
peer-reviewed journals. Coverage spans virtually every area of
academic study and offers information dating as far back as 1975.
|
| |
Discipline/Topic Areas: Multidisciplinary (Arts
& Humanities)
Resource Type: Electronic Index (Subscription)
Publisher/Vendor: Thomson ISI, Web of Knowledge
Description: Multidisciplinary database covering
the journal literature of the arts and humanities. It indexes
1,144 of the world's leading arts and humanities journals, as
well as covering individually selected, relevant items from over
6,800 major science and social science journals. A feature of
this index is the inclusion of all cited references.
|
| |
 |
 |
Coverage: Date
Varies |
Discipline/Topic Areas: Multidisciplinary (Arts
& Humanities)
Resource Type: Electronic Image Collection (Subscription)
Publisher/Vendor: ARTstor Inc.
Description: Large library of approximately 300,000
digital images and descriptive data. ARTstor documents artistic
traditions across many times and cultures and embraces architecture,
archaeology, painting, sculpture, photography, decorative arts,
and design as well as many other forms of visual culture. This
resource also provides software tools to enable active use of
the images. These tools support a wide range of uses including
analyzing images, saving groups of images online, and creating
presentations.
|
| |
Discipline/Topic Areas: Art
Resource Type: Electronic Index (Subscription)
Publisher/Vendor Information: RLG, Eureka
Description: Covering European and American art
from late antiquity to the present, the Bibliography of the History
of Art indexes and abstracts art-related books, conference proceedings
and dissertations, exhibition and dealer's catalogs, and articles
from more than 2,500 periodicals. The Bibliography of the History
of Art is updated quarterly and covers 1973 to the present.
|
| |
Discipline/Topic Areas: Multidisciplinary (Arts
& Humanities, Social Sciences, Sciences)
Resource Type: Ejournal Collection (Subscription)
Publisher/Vendor: JSTOR
Description: Large collection of core scholarly
journals in the arts and humanities, social sciences, and sciences.
Fulltext back to their date of first publication to within the
current 2-5 years. 13 Classical Studies journals are included
in the collection.
|
| |
 |
 |
Coverage: 1959-2002 |
Discipline/Topic Areas: Classics
Resource Type: Electronic Index (Subscription)
Publisher/Vendor: Societe Internationale de Bibliographie
Classique, American Philological Association, Database of Classical
Bibliography, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, National
Endowment for the Humanities
Description: Includes coverage for over 1,500
periodicals with citations of all known scholarly work published
in any language anywhere in the world concerning the areas of
ancient Greek and Latin language and linguistics, Greek and Roman
history, literature, philosophy, numismatics, papyrology and epigraphy,
and concerning the time period from the second millennium B.C.
to roughly 500-800 A.D. Also includes coverage of research collections
and conferences.
|
| |
Discipline/Topic Areas: Multidisciplinary (Arts
& Humanities, Social Sciences)
Resource Type: Electronic Index (Subscription)
Publisher/Vendor: Chadwyck-Healey, ProQuest Information
and Learning
Description: Index to over 4,300 international
journals in the fields of humantities and the social sciences
from the first date of the journal's publication through about
1995.
|
| |
Discipline/Topic Areas: Classics, History, Philosophy
Resource Type: Etext Collection (Subscription)
Publisher/Vendor: Department of Classics, Tufts University
Description: Digital library of source materials
for the study of the ancient world and beyond. You may search
on terms or, if you wish to see images, go directly to the Vase
Catalog or search
the Vase Catalog.
|
| |
Discipline/Topic Areas: Multidisciplinary (Arts
& Humanities, Social Sciences, Sciences)
Resource Type: Ejournal Collection (Subscription)
Publisher/Vendor: Johns Hopkins University Press, Project
MUSE
Description: Searchable collection of fulltext
journals in the humanities, social sciences and sciences. 3
Classics journals are included in the collection.
|
Return to Top
Web Research
- What? The Internet
is used to access information stored in files or documents on
another computer. When you use the Internet, you retrieve documents,
view images, programs, animation, and video, listen to sound files,
speak and hear voice, via the World Wide Web. (From the UC
Berkeley Library Web site)
- When? Use the
Web to start your research. Like Reference Collection resources,
Websites can help with finding background information for your
research project.
- Where? Use a Web
browser like Mozilla, Internet Explorer, Safari, Netscape, Avant,
or Opera to access information via the Internet. No single search
engine can claim to even come close to searching the entire Web.
For best results, use multiple search engines.
- Google
- A great search engine to start with when surfing and searching
on the Web.
- Search
Engine Watch - Access additional search engines.
Also find information and reviews about these search engines.
|
| |
Selected Web Resources for this Course |
| |
ANCIENT
WORLD WEB
A personal Web site that categorizes over a thousand Web sites related
to the ancient world. "Art" is one of the categories, with
86 sites listed. |
| |
BEAZLEY
ARCHIVE: Greek Painted Pottery
From the Beazley Archive, research unit of the Faculty of Classics.
Oxford University. |
| |
ELECTRONIC
RESOURCES FOR CLASSICISTS
A comprehensive list of electronic resouces, maintained at the University
of California, Irvine. |
Return to Top
Evaluating Research Materials
| Evaluating research materials involves analyzing a resource
to determine its usefulness and appropriateness with respect to
your research project. Evaluation is important during all phases
of a research project. You must select the best and most appropriate
resources for your research.
Criteria to Consider
When Evaluating Research Materials:
- Accuracy
- Author(s) or Creating Body
- Authority
- Bias or Point of View
- Coverage
- Criticism or Reviews
- Currency or Date of Publication
|
- Edition or Revision
- Intended Audience
- Level of Scholarship
- Organization, Structure, and Design
- Purpose or Function
- Scope
- Type of Material
|
|
Return to Top
Borrowing Materials & Interlibrary Loan
- What? Interlibary
Loan, or ILL, is a DeWitt Wallace Library service that allows
current Macalester students, staff, and faculty to request materials
not available at Macalester.
- When? If Macalester
does not own, or subscribe to, the research material you need,
you can ask the Library to try and borrow the item from another
Library in the area.
- Where? The Library
uses a system called ILLiad that allows you to place requests
for materials and track the status of these requested materials.
|
Return to Top
Citing Your Resources
- What? Giving credit
to the ideas of other scholars when you use their work or research
in developing your own project.
- When? You must
cite a resource whenever you quote, paraphrase, summarize, or
otherwise refer to the work of another.
- Where? Citing
a source usually includes parenthetical documentation or use of
a footnote within the text of your project as well as creating
a works cited reference list at the end of your project using
a specific citation style. See the Library's Citing
Resources Guide Web page for more information.
- RefWorks
- Service that allows you to download, organize, annotate,
and search citations you find during your research as well
as create in-text citations and works cited bibliographies
for your papers.
Common Citation Style Manuals
Chicago Manual of Style
Chicago : The Press, 1982-
MAC Ref Z253 .U69 2003
MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers
Joseph Gibaldi. New York : Modern Language Association of America,
2003.
MAC Ref LB2369 .G53 2003
Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association
Washington, DC : American Psychological Association, c2001.
MAC Ref BF76.7 .P83 2001
|
Return to Top
|