1 / 53

Library Services for AGDP Distance January 2013 Sonya Lipczynska sonya.lipczynska@kcl.ac.uk Research & Learning

Library Services for AGDP Distance January 2013 Sonya Lipczynska sonya.lipczynska@kcl.ac.uk Research & Learning Support. What you might want to know about?. How do I access King’s online? How can I access e-books and e-journals? What is the best way to access and search online databases?

hesper
Download Presentation

Library Services for AGDP Distance January 2013 Sonya Lipczynska sonya.lipczynska@kcl.ac.uk Research & Learning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Library Services for AGDP DistanceJanuary 2013Sonya Lipczynska sonya.lipczynska@kcl.ac.ukResearch & Learning Support

  2. What you might want to know about? • How do I access King’s online? • How can I access e-books and e-journals? • What is the best way to access and search online databases? • How can I use RefWorks to cite my references? • How do I get help?

  3. How do I access King’s online?

  4. Passwords King’s username and password • Campus desktop • Global desktop • OneSpace • College e-learning (KEATS) • King’s email service (add @kcl.ac.uk to your King’s username to make your WindowsLiveID e.g. k12345678@kcl.ac.uk) • Wireless network • Resources e.g. databases & journals, online reading lists Library barcode and pin • for the Library catalogue

  5. How do I get to King’sonline? College external web site http://www.kcl.ac.uk Internal College portal https://internal.kcl.ac.uk/index.aspx

  6. How can I find and access items on my reading list?

  7. Finding books • The Library catalogue will tell you • If we have the book you want • If it has been taken out by someone • Where you will find it in the library • You’ll need to know the classmark to work out how to find a book • For example: PE1408 LEV is the classmark for ‘Write great essays!’ by Peter Levin

  8. Catalogue basics – reading list items • Search the Library Catalogue using: Author’s SURNAME and... One keyword from the TITLE • Click on ‘location’ for any item that interests you • Write down the classmark • Use a floor plan to find the classmark’s location

  9. Journal Articles • Journals are used to disseminate research and encourage debate amongst academics • They are published regularly throughout the year • Each volume will contain several different articles on different topics by different academics • Journals are listed on the Library catalogue • You will need to search for the journal title rather than the article title

  10. Journal article • Example reference: • Ryba F, Rice S and Hutchison I. (2010) Numb chin syndrome: an ominous clinical sign. British Dental Journal. 208(7)283-285 • Inter-site article request service • Free of charge for all students

  11. Subject support

  12. Plagiarism and TurnitinUK • Avoid plagiarism and collusion • Learn how to put things in your own words • Learn how to cite the sources you use • Manage your time and deadlines • You may have to submit work to TurnitinUK • Practice TurnitinUKmodule available from KEATS

  13. Student computing • Campus Desktop (mostStudent Computing rooms) • Wide range of software; access to your 100MB file store ‘ My Docs’ • Global Desktop (on & off campus) • Access at http://desktop.kcl.ac.uk • ‘Most’ Campus Desktop apps. available • Access to your 100MB file store; ‘My documents’

  14. King’s email service • Based on ‘Windows Live’ • College email service • Outlook Web App • You can find the link on the internal website • Primary route for College to communicate with you! • You have a 10GB mailbox • Can sync with existing services e.g. Yahoo!Mail

  15. How do I get help?

  16. Getting help • ‘AskMe online’ from http://www.kcl.ac.uk/library/contact/index.aspx • User guides http://www.kcl.ac.uk/library/help/guides.aspx

  17. Getting help • Enquiry desks (libraryservices@kcl.ac.uk) • For any library or IT enquiry • Password problems • Open in core hours • http://www.kcl.ac.uk/library/support/index.aspx • IT Service desk (itservicedesk@kcl.ac.uk) • 020 7848 2430 • Your Information Specialist!

  18. Questions?

  19. Searching databases

  20. Outline • Planning searches • Using databases to find journal articles • Using RefWorks to create in-text citations and bibliographies • Demonstrations • Hands-on practice

  21. What is Medline? • A database used to find references in journals • Dentistry, medicine, nursing, allied health, biological and physical sciences, nutrition, health care, psychiatry • Bibliographic databases • Author, title, journal, abstract • 16 million references to articles from 1948 • 5,300 journal titles indexed • There are different versions of Medline • Ovid platform: King’s username and password, full text links • PubMed: free access, can set up full-text links

  22. What is Embase? • Some overlap with Medline • Major resource in the field of biomedicine, drugs research, pharmacology and toxicology • Based in Holland, so extensive coverage of European literature and topics • Indexes over 4,000 international journals, 1974 to date • Ovid platform – King’s username and password • Full text links

  23. Planning your search • Before you search for information, it is important to develop a search strategy • Identify the key concepts & keywords • Identify any synonyms, alternative spellings etc • If possible, search each concept separately and then combine • Refine your search – too many records? Too few? • Check your results for clues for additional search terms

  24. Outline • Planning searches • Creating RefWorks library • Performing literature searches using healthcare databases • Transferring data to RefWorks • Write n Cite

  25. Finding articles in your subject area If you want to find articles in a particular subject area, use bibliographic databases to perform a literature search: • Medline • Embase • Web of Science • Scopus

  26. What is Medline

  27. What is Embase?

  28. ISI Web of Science

  29. Other resources

  30. Planning your search

  31. Focus your question Ask focused, answerable questions e.g.: How does sedation compare with general anaesthesia when providing dental treatment for primary-age children?

  32. Select the key concepts How does sedation compare with general anaesthesia when providing dental treatment for the under-18s? • Dentistry • Conscious sedation • General anaesthesia • Age group: Children between 6-11

  33. Subject heading searches • Some databases (e.g. Medline) use subject headings to organise their records • Subject headings are applied to records to provide a consistent vocabulary – e.g. Antibacterial Agents will be applied to any record on antibiotics • Subject headings may differ between databases • Not all databases use subject headings, e.g. Web of Science

  34. Free text searching What you type in will be searched exactly as written, so you will need to be accurate and detailed – e.g. a free text search for ‘conscious sedation’ might include the following terms: Conscious sedation Relative analgesia Anti-anxiety agents Hypnotics & Sedatives Barbiturates Benzodiazepines

  35. Truncation in free text searches Use an asterisk to ask the database to search for plurals and variant terms: • Relative analgesi*= analgesia OR analgesic • Sedative* = sedative OR sedatives

  36. Boolean operators • AND, OR, NOT • Used to combine search terms • Can be used for two or more terms • Must be used for two or more terms • Other related operators depending on the database (SAME/SENT)

  37. AND • Retrieves results only containing both terms • e.g. Conscious sedation AND general anasthesia • Makes search more specific

  38. OR • Retrieves results containing either term • Useful for synonyms and related terms • e.g. Nitrous Oxide OR Diazepam • Makes search broader

  39. NOT • Excludes a term • e.g. conscious sedation NOT adult* • Useful when you don’t want a word present in the records you find – i.e. to get rid of irrelevant results. • Take care not to filter out results which could be relevant

  40. Subheadings • Use in Medline or Embase to find articles that concentrate on a particular aspect of a topic e.g. therapy • Could be useful if overwhelmed with references, e.g. use the treatment or diagnosis subheadings • Use with caution – normally, just tick Include All Subheadings

  41. Summary • Always plan ahead • Use a range of databases • Search using subject headings if possible, and free-text searching if appropriate • Refine your search if you need to • Cite your references correctly

  42. Other useful resources Cochrane http://www.thecochranelibrary.com For high level evidence such as systematic reviews NHS Evidence – Oral Health http://www.library.nhs.uk/oralhealth/ For access to the high quality resources in evidence based oral health

  43. Create RefWorks account Go to http://www.refworks.com/RWShibboleth and login with your King’s username and password.

  44. Getting references into RefWorks • Direct import (from database) • Creating folders • Upload of text files • Pulling in references from online source • Manual input

  45. Practical – direct import • Search Ovid Medline database for references • Search topic: • Dental implants AND Quality of life Export about 10 references

  46. Practical – online catalogue search Use the search function to search the ISS catalogue • McCabe, J. (2008) Applied Dental Materials. 9th ed. Oxford: Blackwell.

More Related