Thursday, 26 March 2015

Referencing traditional texts



When referencing classic texts / traditional texts (for the SOCQ121 assignment) the standard is to use the reprint date as the date of publication, then the original date in brackets.

An eBook example for this would be:

Darwin, C 2008 (1859), On the origin of the species, Oxford University Press, Oxford, viewed 26 March 2015,

A print example for this would be:

Darwin, C 1964 (1859), On the origin of the species, Harvard University Press, Cambridge.

Dr Michelle Mars has added these 2 examples to the SOCQ121 LMS loop. 

Tuesday, 3 March 2015

Troubleshooting Discovery links

Discovery is an excellent search tool to find articles (and ebooks) but when connecting to external databases, occasionally the links to a full text article may not work correctly. If you're having trouble try these few tips or ask a Librarian.

  •  If you find an article that directs you to another database, first try the link, but if that doesn't connect you, go to the Databases list on LibGuides ... open the specific database and paste the title or author in the search box.
  • Sometimes Discovery will state that an external database has an article in full text (see below) ... but the info is not always accurate, you need to double check as sometimes its only an Abstract / summary. 

Discovery results display
Full text availability


YES
 Full text available
__________






YES & NO
Not all articles are full text. Search in AcademicOneFile (Gale Cengage) for better results.



NO
Rarely connects to Proquest. Save reference and search in Proquest.

NO
Rarely connects to BioMed. Save reference and search in BioMed Central.

YES & NO
Most articles are linked to ScienceDirect but some are abstracts.