Finding Information for Economics November 2007. Aims of the session To help you to: Find information relevant to your needs from the Library’s web pages.

Post on 20-Dec-2015

215 Views

Category:

Documents

2 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

Transcript

Finding Information for Economics

November 2007

Aims of the session

To help you to:

• Find information relevant to your needs from the Library’s web pages

• Locate material for your research in the library and online

• Make academic use of the Internet

• Know where to go for help

Gateway to resources

• Library information and booking services

• Electronic subscription services e.g. e-books and e-journals

• Recommended e-resources

• Pre-evaluated web pages

• Help

Library Web pages

http://www.dur.ac.uk/library

Catalogue home page

http://library.dur.ac.uk/

Book References

Bodie, Z. (2008) Investments. Boston: McGraw-Hill.

Foster, G. (1994) ‘Briloff and the capital markets’ in Lofthouse, S. (ed.) Readings in investments. Chichester: Wiley, pp. 67-78.

Catalogue search

Journals

• Print and/or electronic versions– Check date coverage for online journals

• Use databases to locate bibliographic information and some full text articles – See online resources or subject pages for

listings– Use ConneXions to check access

Journal reference

Mora, T. and López-Tamayo, J. (2005) ‘Are wages and productivity converging simultaneously in Euro-area countries?’ Applied Economics, 37(17) pp. 2001-2008.

Catalogue search

Database search

Websites

• Why evaluate?– Anyone can be a web author– No controls over what is posted on the web– Very little material is peer-reviewed or edited– Much of the information may be out of date

• Gateways via Subject Information Pages

• Intute for Economics

Effective searching

• Definitions and synonyms e.g. evidence, information, data, facts, statistics

• Adjacency or refine using “ ” e.g. “International Monetary Fund”

• Boolean operators: AND, OR & AND NOT(global OR international) AND (economic AND

NOT health)

Effective searching

• Truncation e.g. econom** will find: economy, economic, economical, economist, econometric etc.

• Wildcards e.g. organi*ation

• Proximity e.g. EU WITHIN 3 growth

• Advanced search option/ help

References and Bibliographies

• ALWAYS keep a full and accurate record of your information sources

• E-mail references for saving from Library catalogue or databases

• Make sure you refer correctly to other authors within your work

• Avoid plagiarism

Where to get help

• Enquiries Desk, Level 2

• On-line enquiry service:

http://www.dur.ac.uk/library/use/enquiries.htm

• Academic Support Team:

Richard Pears and Laura Jeffrey

What Happens Next

• From the University home page click on:

Current Student Gateway | Library | Subject information | Economics | Information skills | Level 1 training

• Or go directly to www.dur.ac.uk/library/economics/info_skills/ug1/

• Please fill in the evaluation survey at the bottom of the page

top related