Post on 04-Jan-2016
description
2433 Care and Prevention of Athletic Injuries
Jane Long, MA, MLIS Periodicals & Government Documents LibrarianAl Harris Library
When You Need HELP!
Off-Campus Access
http://www.swosu.edu/library/infoservices/remoteaccess.asp
If you are off campus and trying to access a restricted section of the library, you will be prompted for your username and password. Students enter your webmail username and password and you should be able to proceed with no problems.
If you have problems logging in.
What Is an Abstract?
The Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary provides the following definition for the noun form of the word:
“a summary of points (as of a writing) usually presented in skeletal form; also : something that summarizes or concentrates the essentials of a larger thing or several things.”
Your assignment involves summarizing and condensing the information found in a peer-reviewed article.
Evaluating Information
Scholarly sources are concerned with academic study, especially research for individuals who need current information to stay informed of changes in their profession or area of expertise. Many scholarly journals are peer reviewed or refereed. These articles have been subjected to a rigorous approval and editing process by other scholars in that discipline.
Remember: It is easy to locate scholarly resources by using databases for searching.
Databases: Nursing & Allied HealthSPORTDiscus with Full Text (EBSCOhost)
Health Source: Nursing/Academic Edition (EBSCOhost)
CINAHL with Full Text (EBSCOhost)
Keyword vs. Subject
• Natural language (words and phrases you would use in everyday conversations)
• Flexible terminology:Synonyms and words with the same or similar meanings can be substituted
• Less accurate when searching in article databases
• Use with operators (AND, OR, NOT)
• Predetermined terminology (such as those created by the Library of Congress or National Library of Medicine)
• Terms like those found in a Thesaurus (with narrower and broader terms)
• More precise when searching (most article databases have their own predetermined terminology)
Boolean Operators
• AND◦Narrows your search
OR◦Expands your search with synonymous terms
NOT◦Excludes words from your search
EBSCO databases implement Boolean searching.
What Should You Locate? Use limiters: peer
reviewed, full text, current dates
Use subject headings for refining your search
Narrow the number of sources by examining the abstract for the source
First Step: Setting up an EBSCO folder
Next Step
Use APA to cite your sources
Need help with using APA?
Use this link for assistance:
http://campusguides.swosu.edu/apa
APA Citation Information
Goldberg, A. S., Moroz, L., Smith, A., & Ganley,
T. (2007). Injury surveillance in young
athletes: A clinician’s guide to sports injury
literature. Sports Medicine, 37(3), 266-278.
doi: 10.2165/00007256-200737030-00005
A digital object identifier (DOI) should be
included in the reference if one has been
assigned.
APA Citation Information
Bergeron, M.F. (2009). Youth sports in the heat: Recovery
and scheduling considerations for tournament play.
Sports Medicine, 39(7), 513-522. Retrieved from
http://adisonline.com/sportsmedicine/pages/default.as
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If there is no DOI assigned and the reference was
retrieved online, give the URL for the journal’s home
page.
Organizing Your Research
1. Find an article or articles that support your topic.
2. Once you have located appropriate articles, save them in your folder.
3. Look at the documentation information that EBSCO provides.
4. Check the APA citation format examples.
5. Write your own abstract following the guidelines that have been given to you by your professor.
Questions?
Contact me:◦Jane Long774-3731 jane.long@swosu.eduhttp://faculty.swosu.edu/jane.long/
Please help us out by taking the following survey at the end of today’s class: Click here to take the survey.
Thank you!