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Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $27.50

Format:
Paperback
352 pp.
25 b/w halftones, 5.5" x 8.25"

ISBN-13:
9780199931064

Publication date:
April 2015

Imprint: OUP US


The Oxford Guide to Library Research

How to Find Reliable Information Online and Offline, Fourth Edition

Thomas Mann

The information world has undergone drastic changes since the publication of the 3rd edition of The Oxford Guide to Library Research in 2005, and Thomas Mann, a veteran reference librarian at the Library of Congress, has extensively revised his text to reflect those changes. This book will answer two basic questions: First, what is the extent of the significant research resources you will you miss if you confine your research entirely, or even primarily, to sources available on the open Internet? Second, if you are trying to get a reasonably good overview of the literature on a particular topic, rather than just "something quickly" on it, what are the several alternative methods of subject searching - which are not available on the Web - that are usually much more efficient for that purpose than typing keywords into a blank search box, with the results displayed by relevance-ranking computer algorithms?

This book shows researchers how to do comprehensive research on any topic. It explains the variety of search mechanisms available, so that the researcher can have the reasonable confidence that s/he has not overlooked something important. This includes not just lists of resources, but discussions of the ways to search within them: how to find the best search terms, how to combine the terms, and how to make the databases (and other sources) show relevant material even when you don't know how to specify the best search terms in advance. The book's overall structuring by nine methods of searching that are applicable in any subject area, rather than by subjects or by types of literature, is unique among guides to research. Also unique is the range and variety of concrete examples of what to do - and of what not to do.

The book is not "about" the Internet: it is about the best alternatives to the Internet - the sources that are not on the open Web to begin with, that can be found only through research libraries and that are more than ever necessary for any kind of substantive scholarly research. More than any other research guide available, this book directly addresses and provides solutions to the serious problems outlined in recent studies documenting the profound lack of research skills possessed by today's "digital natives."

Readership : Suitable for college students, graduate students, scholars, journalists, and other non-fiction writers.

Preface
1. Initial Overview Sources: Specialized Encyclopedias
2. Subject Headings and the Library Catalog
3. General Browsing, Focused Browsing, and Use of Classified Bookstacks
4. Subject Headings and Descriptors in Databases for Journal Articles
5. Keyword Searches
6. Citation Searches
7. Related Record Searches
8. Higher Level Overview Sources: Literature Review Articles
9. Published Bibliographies
10. Boolean Combinations and Search Limitations
11. Locating Material in Other Libraries
12. People Sources
13. Hidden Treasures
14. Special Subjects and Formats
15. Reference Sources: Types of Literature
Appendix I: Wisdom
Appendix II: Scholarship vs. Quick Information Seeking
Index

There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.

Thomas Mann has been a general reference librarian in the Main Reading Room of the Library of Congress for more than thirty years.

Making Sense in the Social Sciences - Margot Northey, Lorne Tepperman and Patrizia Albanese
Using a Law Library - Peter Clinch
Processing the Past - Francis X. Blouin, Jr and William G. Rosenberg

Special Features

  • Provides a systematic overview of the best sources, both electronic and print, that go far beyond the coverage of Google and Wikipedia.
  • Demonstrates why brick-and-mortar research libraries are more important than ever.
  • Teaches, with multiple concrete examples, how to find the best search terms to use in searching databases.
New to this Edition
  • Explains in greater detail six important differences between the thousands of specialized subject encyclopedias that exist and Wikipedia, and provides an updated sample listing of the former.
  • Discusses in detail scores of major subscription databases that did not exist in 2005, or whose earlier versions were not discussed.
  • Provides the best explanations of how to find the right search terms for any inquiry.
  • Provides the only current discussion of the essential differences between keyword relevance ranking (as in Google) vs. conceptual categorization (as in library catalogs).
  • Provides new instructions (and examples) on how to zero in immediately on literature review articles.
  • Provides additional examples of what can be found via published bibliographies that cannot be found via online sources.
  • Provides expanded coverage of sources for statistical information.
  • Lists free websites that reference librarians find to be particularly useful.