Hours |
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Main Library | 7:30am – 2:00am |
Circulation Desk | 7:30am – 2:00am |
Digital Humanities Lab | 7:30am – 2:00am |
Interlibrary Loan Office | 8:00am – 5:00pm |
Reference Desk | 9:00am – 10:00pm |
Step 1: Choose a Research Topic
When you start, you don't need to have a specific research question in mind at this point - just a general topic that you want to explore.
Step 2: Find Background Information
Once you have a general topic in mind, it is important to refine your focus until you have a manageable topic. An idea like "I want to learn more about problems of censorship" lacks focus and will leave you frustrated.
Refining your topic can be difficult if you are not deeply familiar with your general area of interest. In order to help you focus your topic, it is important that you gather background information early on in your research. Specialized dictionaries and encyclopedias can also be valuable tools at this stage of your research. They can give you an overview of the topic as a whole and introduce you to the specialized vocabulary related to the topic.
Start searching databases and other research resources as part of shaping your question, and understanding the literature. If the first time you start searching is after you have a research question, you may become frustrated with the lack or resources, or find studies that have already addressed your areas of interest.
Step 3: Translate Your Interest into a Research Question
After gathering background information, frame it as a question. There are a number of ways to focus this.
Step 4: Further Modifying Your Topic
You will often need to narrow or broaden your question scope. Also, your methodology will effect your scope. Are you planning a comprehensive scoping review that casts the net wide? Are you doing original research? Check in with librarians, teaching assistants, or your faculty member for advice.
This content is modified from Godwin University
AND, OR & NOT are Boolean search operators. You can use these words to direct a database how to search for your concept terms.
OR
You can combine AND, OR, and NOT to build very complex searches by grouping each concept in parentheses.
(surcalose OR aspartame OR saccharin) AND headaches
You can use OR with dissimilar concepts, but watch out for the relevancy and result size. This example would need refining, but could be a useful starting point.
(cats OR dogs) AND "household pets"
AND
NOT
In the following example, I want to look at different types of therapy that cats and dogs are used for, but I'm not interested in therapy to remove phobias about dogs or cats. Also, I happen to know that authors Samuel and Elizabeth Corson do research on drug therapy used for aggressive animals. That would be the wrong direction, so I want to exclude their articles.
Set searching allows you to break apart sections of a Boolean search and recombine them. Each search you try becomes a line in a grid. At any time you can check off a box to combine lines by a Boolean command.
The UGA Libraries provides access to citation management software, both dowloadable (EndNote) and cloud-based (RefWorks. Take advantage of these free and supported resources.
You may also wish to try public tiered services. For example, Zotero is a free service, until you reach over 300 MB in stored references. Then you must pay for more storage.