Research & Computing Help
Research Help |
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- 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
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Aaron Albertson
Reference & Instruction Librarian
albertson @macalester.edu
(651) 696 - 6530 |
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Computing Help |
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- 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.
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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.
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Selected Reference Resources for this Course
African American Writers (MAC Ref PS153.N5 A344
1991) Valerie Smith, Lea Baechler, and A. Walton Litz, eds. New York
: Charles Scribner's Sons, c1991. African-American
Writers: A Dictionary (MAC Ref PS153.N5 A3444 2000) Shari
Dorantes Hatch and Michael R. Strickland, eds. Santa Barbara, California
: ABC-CLIO, c2000. Afro-American Women Writers 1746-1933:
An Anthology and Critical Guide (MAC Ref PS508.N3 A36 1988) Ann
Allen Shockley, ed. Boston : G. K. Hall and Co., c1988. American
Ethnic Literatures: Native American, African American, chicano/ Latino,
and Asian American Writers and their Backgrounds: An Annotated Bibliography
(MAC Ref PS153.M56 P43 1992) David R. Peck. Pasadena, California
: Salem Press, c 1992. Best literature by and about
Blacks (MAC Ref PS153.N5 R53 2000) Phillip M. Richards, Neil
Schlager. Detroit : Gale Group, c2000. Black literature
criticism : excerpts from criticism of the most significant works
of Black authors over the past 200 years (MAC Ref PS153.N5 B556 1992)
James P. Draper, editor. Detroit : Gale Research, c1992. 3 vols +suppl.
Encylopedia of African-American Culture and History (MAC
Ref E185 E54 1996) Jack Salzman, David Lionel Smith, Cornell
West, editors. New York: Simon & Schuster Macmillan. 1996. 5 vols+suppl.
Essential Black literature guide (MAC Ref PN841 .V35 1996)
Roger M. Valade III. Detroit : Visible Ink Press, c1996.
netLibrary
Reference Center - (Current) (MAC Online Reference Resource)
Ninteenth-Century Literature Criticism: Criticism of the Works of
Novelists, Philosophers, and Other Creative Writers Who Died between
1800 and 1899, from the First Published Critical Appraisals to Current
Evaluations (MAC Ref PN 761.N5) Detroit : ThomsonGale.
Oxford Companion To African American Literature (MAC Ref PS153.N5
O96 1997) William L. Andrews, Francis Smith Foster, and Trudier
Harris (eds.). Oxford University Press: New York, 1997.
Oxford
Reference Online (Current) (MAC Online Reference Resource)
Schomburg Center Guide to black literature from
the eighteenth century to the present (MAC Ref PN841 .V348 1996)
Roger M. Valade III, editor with Denise Kasinec. Detroit : Gale Research,
1996. |
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Finding Books & More: Catalogs
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Finding Articles & More : Indexes & Electronic
Collections
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Selected Indexes & Electronic Collections
for this Course |
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| Academic
Search Premier - 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. |
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| American
Slavery (A Composite Autobiography) - Authoritative collection
of WPA slave narratives on the Web. These are reproductions of the
slave narratives collected by the WPA between 1936-1938. Many of these
publications are also available in print in the library. |
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| International
Index to Black Periodicals Full Text (IIBP) - Includes
current and retrospective citations and abstracts from over 150 scholarly
and popular journals, newspapers and newsletters from the United States,
Africa and the Caribbean and full-text coverage of 40 core Black Studies
periodicals from 1998 to the present. |
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| JSTOR
- Large archival 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. |
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| Literature
Resource Center (LRC) - Massive collection of literary
resources, including the MLA International Bibliography index, with
coverage of other fields in the humanities and social sciences. Includes
access to more than 400,000 full-text literary journal articles, 40,000
plus critical essays, and over 120,000 author biographies in the electronic
versions of Contemporary Authors, Dictionary of Literary Biography,
and portions of Contemporary Literary Criticism. Also provides work
overviews, plot summaries, explications, authoritative Web sites,
and Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of Literature. |
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| MLA
International Bibliography (Modern Language Association International
Bibliography) - Index covering literature from all over
the world including Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, and North and
South America. Folklore is represented by folk literature, music,
art, rituals, and belief systems. Linguistics and language materials
range from history and theory of linguistics, comparative linguistics,
semantics, stylistics, and syntax to translation. Other topics include
literary theory and criticism, dramatic arts (film, radio, television,
theater), and history of printing and publishing. |
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| Project
MUSE - Searchable collection of fulltext journals in
the humanities, social sciences and sciences. |
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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.
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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
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- Edition or Revision
- Intended Audience
- Level of Scholarship
- Organization, Structure, and Design
- Purpose or Function
- Scope
- Type of Material
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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.
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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
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