Information Services DeWitt Wallace Library Macalester College
Course Guide
 

Selected Sources for MATH 153-01 Introduction to Statistics



Research & Computing Help

For Research Help:

 
  • Visit the Reference Desk in the Library, just inside the main doors to your right. (Librarians are available Mon.-Thurs. 8am-9pm, Fri. 8am-4:30pm, Sat. 12:30-4:30pm, Sun. 1pm-9pm).
  • Setup a Personal Consultation Session with a Reference Librarian (at the Reference Desk).
  • Call the Reference Desk at x6618 [Off Campus (651) 696-6618].
  • Submit a Request for Assistance or email a question using the Library's AskUs Form.
  • Contact your Instruction Session Librarian.
 

Terri Fishel, Library Director
fishel@macalester.edu
(651) 696-6343

 

For Computing Help:

 
  • Visit the Computing Help Desk Office in the Humanities Building, Room 310. (Office Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 8am-10pm, Fri. 8am-4pm, Sun. 4pm-10pm)
  • Visit the Computing Lab in the Library during library hours
  • Call the CIT (Computing & Information Technology) Computing Help Desk at x6525 [Off Campus (651) 696-6525] and 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.

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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 Print and Electronic Reference Resources



The materials listed below represent a sample of Reference resources that relate to this course. Because this course is multi-disciplinary, we have included just some general resources, but additional sources would be found in the Philosopy, Political Science, and Literature sections. Check the Reference Collection for additional resources that may relate more directly to your specific project.

 

A DICTIONARY OF MATHEMATICS (REF QA5 .G623 1984) Totown, NJ: Barnes & Noble Books, 1984.

 

COMPANION ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF THE MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES (REF QA21.C645 1994) NY: Routledge. 1994, 2 VOLS.
Written by scholars, this is a series of articles tracing developments through time in the history and philosophy of mathematics. Each article includes a bibliography.

 
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF MATHEMATICS (REF QA 5 M3713 1998) Boston: Reidel, 1988-94, 10 vols.
Translation of the Soviet Mathematical Encylcopedia
 
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF STATISTICAL SCIENCES (REF QA 276.14 e5 1982) NY:Wiley, 1997-1999


Oxford Reference Online

| Search Help | Title List

Multidisciplinary (Arts & Humanities, Social Sciences, Sciences)Oxford University Press.
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.

 

Xreferplus

| Search Help | Title List

Multidisciplinary (Arts & Humanities, Social Sciences, Sciences)
Resource of reference materials providing access to about 150 online reference books including encyclopedias, dictionaries, thesauri and books of quotations from a variety of publishers. Covers both general reference and subject-specific reference titles for a variety of disciplines. Allows cross-referencing across different books and provides a unique, graphics-based Research Mapper for topic exploration.

 

Statistical Resources

Finding statistics can be a complex and lengthy process. Start searching for statistics as soon as possible in your research. Statistics can be found in a variety of locations including print resources, indexes, and on the Web. Be specific about the type of statistics you seek. Keep in mind that the more variables involved (e.g. statistics for multiple countries, statistics for multiple ethnic groups, statistics covering a long period of time, etc.) the more complex your search may be. We have statistics by geographic location, by type of statistics--economic, education, and more. Examples of types of resources are:
 
STATISTICAL ABSTRACT OF THE U.S. (REF HA 201 ) Annual publication.
Also available from the U.S. Bureau of the Census at http://www.census.gov/prod/www/statistical-abstract-us.html
 
U.S. BUREAU OF THE CENSUS - accessible from the web, complete collection of various data sets
 
Fed Stats - the gateway to statistics from over 100 U.S. Federal agencies

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Finding Books : Catalogs

Use online catalogs to locate books in local libraries. Here at Macalester, our online catalog is called CLICnet. It is often helpful to start with a "Superkeyword" search in the CLICnet catalog where you combine topics that relate to your research project. For example:

  • statistics and medicine
  • gambling systems
  • mathematical statistics

Be sure to check the Subject headings listed in the records you retrieve so that you will find other useful and more specific terms and phrases to search. CLICnet uses the Subject Headings found in the Library of Congress Subject Headings books kept near the Reference Desk in the Library.

  • CLICnet (Macalester's Library Catalog)
  • MNCAT (the University of Minnesota's Library Catalog)
  • WorldCat (OCLC catalog of holdings in over 6,000 libraries worldwide)

For More Information:

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Books at Macalester

In the DeWitt Wallace Library, as in other libraries, books are grouped together on the shelves by subject area. The Library uses the Library of Congress (or LC) Classification System to assign call numbers, using both letters and numbers, to books based on their subject matter. Use the CLICnet Library Catalog to find books in DeWitt Wallace Library. Keep in mind, it is often useful to browse the books on the shelf in a particular subject area to find additional materials that might relate to your research. Listed below are the collection locations for books here in the Library.

Finding Books at Macalester:

  • MAC Reference Collection (First Level)
  • MAC Stacks A - HB (Fourth Level)
  • MAC Stacks HC - PQ (Third Level)
  • MAC Stacks PR - Z (Second Level)
  • MAC 2nd Level-Oversize A-Z (Second Level, South End of the Stacks)
  • MAC SuperOversize Level 2 A-Z (Second Level, SW Study Room, In Library Use Only)
  • MAC Greats Book Coll A-Z (First Level, North Study Room)
  • MAC Wood Collection-Lev 2 A-Z (Second Level, North Room)
  • MAC Harmon Current Read A-Z (First Level, SW Corner, Harmon Room)
  • Archives & Rare Books (Second Level, East, Access By Appointment Only)
  • CLIC Online (netLibrary Ebook Available Online)

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Finding Articles : Indexes

Indexes allow you to access information about articles on your topic which have appeared in periodicals such as journals or magazines. Some indexes also provide information about books, newspaper articles, conference proceedings, government documents and a variety of other publication types. Subject-specific indexes focus on specific disciplines; interdisciplinary indexes survey many disciplines. Many of our indexes are available in electronic form, however print indexes are still the norm for certain disciplines.

For More Information:

 
 
ACM Digital Library (ACM Portal: ACM Digital Library) (1947 - ) This authoritative resource for the Computer Science field provides bibliographic information, abstracts, reviews, and full-text for articles published in ACM periodicals and proceedings since its founding in 1947 as well as selected works published by affiliated organizations. Tables of Contents for ACM Newsletters published since 1985 are also available in the Digital Library. [ACM description] Association for Computing Machinery (ACM).
 
Academic Premier (1980- ) Interdisciplinary index of articles from scholarly and popular journals. A good starting point for any research project that will provide a variety of viewpoints from a wide range of publications. [InfoTrac description]
InfoTrac.
 

JSTOR (Date varies) This is a collection of core scholarly journals in the arts and humanities, with a few science journals, fulltext back to their date of first publication to within the current 2-5 years. JSTOR.

 
LEXIS/NEXIS STATISTICAL - provides access to statistics from a wide-range of resources and publicastions
 
MATH SCI NET, 1940 - This is an online index to mathematical journals and the fulltext of journals published by the American Mathematical Association.
 
WEB OF KNOWLEDGE/Science Citation Index Expanded

Multidisciplinary database with searchable author abstracts, covering the journal literature of the sciences. It indexes more than 5,700 major journals across 164 scientific disciplines. A feature of this index is the inclusion of all cited references.
 
 
 
 
 

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Journals at Macalester

Finding Journals at Macalester:

  • Journal list - Access to full-text content in over 10,000 electronic publications available at Macalester. Includes publications within subscription indexes and full-content Ejournals. Also includes list of titles that are available in the print collection.

Journal Formats

  • Print Journals - Paper journals shelved alphabetically by title. Current periodicals (typically the most recent year of volumes for each journal title) are located on the First Level of the Library and Bound Periodicals (older years for a journal title) are located on the Lower Level.
  • Microform Journals - Journals available on microfiche or microfilm. Microform journals are located on the Lower Level of the Library in a room near the Periodicals and Computer Lab Desk. Microform viewing and printing equipment is available in this room.
  • Full-Text EJournals - Journals within online indexes that provide full-text articles from these journals online. May not include pictures, images, tables, and graphs. Check each individual Online Index to determine if full-text articles are available.
  • Full-Content Ejournals - Electronic equivalent to a print journal, offering the full-content of the print journal online including pictures, images, tables, and graphs. The Library purchases access to individual Ejournal titles as well as Ejournal Collections like JSTOR and Project MUSE.

Examples of titles of interest

For More Information:

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Interlibrary Loan

Interlibrary Loan (or ILL) is a DeWitt Wallace Library service that allows current Macalester students, staff, and faculty the opportunity to submit requests for books, journal articles, and other materials that are not available here in the Library. You may submit up to 5 interlibrary loan requests per day (not including requests you make for books within CLICnet).

For More Information:

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Web Research

The Web is a extremely vast resource of information. While it is important to use critical thinking skills when looking at any information source, the Web can provide particular challenges. Always be aware of things like the authority, scope, source, currency, intended audience, etc. when visiting a Web site; especially when relying on a site as a source for a paper.

Searching the Web can be a daunting experience. Search engines change on a regular basis. Google is the most effective search engine. However, it is important to note that no single search engine can claim to even come close to searching the entire Web. For best results, you should try searches in multiple engines.

Remember, as per class session, Worldcat provides a means to access subject specific websites.

For More Information:

 

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Citing Your Sources

For this course you should refer to the website produced by the University of Wisconsin Writing Center located at http://www.wisc.edu/writing/Handbook/AnnBib_content.html You will find detailed information on an annotated bibliography.

In addition, the library provides access to

RefWorks is a web-based program that allows you to download, organize, annotate, and search citations (references) for your papers and to create bibliographies. When you create bibliographies, choose from a variety of style formats (MLA, APA, Turabian, etc.). With an additional plug-in program, you can use Refworks to create references and bibliographies automatically while writing papers in Microsoft Word. (Please note: the Write-N-Cite plug-in is currently not available for Macintosh computers.)

For More Information:

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Page Last Updated: December 1, 2004
Return to: Course Guides

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