Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne IPFW
Walter E. Helmke Library IPFW

Research Tools


 

NUR 117 Associate of Science Mobility Track Seminar 


Getting Started in the Library

This library guide points you in the direction of some basic library resources for completing library assignments and writing research papers in this course. Many of these resources are available from the library's homepage at http://www.lib.ipfw.edu/, so you may want to bookmark both the homepage and this guide.

Here are some resources to get you started:

Selected Research Works for this Course

Basic Steps in Planning Nursing Research: From Question to Proposal (Stacks RT81.5 .B74 2001)

Handbook of Stress, Coping, and Health: Implications for Nursing Research, Theory, and Practice (Available on campus and off-campus with authorized logon)

Interpreting the Medical Literature (Science Reference R118.6 .G43 2002)

Nursing Research: Methods, Critical Appraisal, and Utilization (Stacks RT81.5 .N8665 1998)

Reading, Understanding, and Applying Nursing Research: A Text and Workbook (Stacks RT81.5 .F35 1999)

Research Strategies for Advanced Practice Nurses (Stacks RT81.5 .N66 2000)


Gaining an Overview

To develop and refine your search, it often helps to consult a specialized dictionary, encyclopedia, handbook, textbook, guide, or bibliography. These tools are designed to offer an overview of your topic or research problem written by an expert. They may provide an historical perspective, a chronology of events, definitions of terms or concepts, or bibliographic references leading to the literature in a particular field of study. Many useful reference works are now available online. These handy e-reference collections are accessible via Find Resources By... Subject, Title, or Type on the library's homepage.

Selected Reference Works for this Course

Books@Ovid (Ovid) (Available on campus and off-campus with authorized logon)

Concise Encyclopedia of the Ethics of New Technologies (Science Reference QH332 .C6545 2001)

Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine (Available on campus and off-campus with authorized logon)

Handbook of HIV/AIDS Nursing (Science Reference RC606.63 .K55 2001)

Lippincott's Critical Care Drug Guide (Science Reference RM301.12 .D4 2000)

Mosby's Medical, Nursing and Allied Health Dictionary (Reference R121 .M89 2002)

Medical Statistics from A to Z : a Guide for Clinicians and Medical Students (Stacks RA407 .E943 2003)

Nursing Diagnosis Handbook : a Guide to Planning Care (Science Reference RT48.6 .A35 2002)

Nurse's Handbook of Alternative and Complementary Therapies (Science Reference R733 .N87 2003)

On-line Medical Dictionary (Academic Medical Publishing / CancerWEB)

Oxford Illustrated Companion to Medicine (Science Reference R121 .O884 2001)

Oxford Reference Online Premium (Oxford University Press) (Medicine) (Available on campus and off-campus with authorized logon)

Saunders Drug Handbook for Health Professionals (Science Reference RM301.12 .K596 2002)

Stedman's Concise Medical Dictionary for the Health Professions (Science Reference R121 .S8 2001)


Searching IUCAT for Books and Periodicals

Search IUCAT Catalog (Indiana University's online library catalog), to find books and periodicals (scholarly journals, popular magazines, newspapers, and other serials), or library materials such as music CDs, electronic resources, and videos. Materials at the Fort Wayne Helmke Library are designated by the library location FORTWAYNE.

IUCAT searches from on-campus computers will show only materials held by the IPFW Fort Wayne Helmke Library. To search all IU libraries, choose ALL from the Select Library pull-down menu on the search screen.

Sometimes IUCAT will lead you to articles in periodicals, but the most efficient way to locate articles is to use a periodical database or index to search many periodicals simultaneously.

Learning about IUCAT

Save time in the long run by investing a half-hour with our interactive Searching IUCAT Tutorial. It is an easy way to grasp fundamental search techniques and try your hand at practice searches designed to reinforce your knowledge. Also check our other IUCAT Guides for help in using IUCAT to your best advantage.

Choosing the Type of Search

Use the default Basic Search search option to find important keywords or phrases in an IUCAT record, in any order. Choose this search when you are unsure of the exact author or title of works on your topic.

Choose the Begins With (Browse) option from the box labeled More IUCAT Searches to find words or phrases exactly as typed, letter-for-letter, searching from left to right. Choose this search to find known authors or titles.

Step 1. Enter term(s) in Title, Author, or Keywords Anywhere search boxes.

Step 2. Under Library, leave Fort Wayne Helmke Library as default, or change to ALL.

Step 3. Click the Search button.

Keyword Search Examples

Keywords Anywhere will search for words anywhere in a record. This search is the default when the Enter key is used instead of clicking the button.

Example: bioethics or medical ethics
Example: florence nightingale (finds works by and about florence nightingale)

Author will search for first or last names in any order in the author fields of a record. Included are personal names, organizations, agencies, corporations, conferences, etc.

Example: madeleine leininger (as a keyword search, yields the same results as typing leininger madeleine)
Example: national league for nursing

Title will search for important words in the title. Do not use initial articles: a, the, la, das, etc.

Example: nursing theorists and their work

Subject will search for important words in the official Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH).

Example: communication in nursing
Example: nurse and patient
Example: nurs$ and (history or biography)

Finding Periodicals in IUCAT

Step 1. Choose Periodical Title Search from the box labeled More IUCAT Searches.

Step 2. Enter the periodical title. Choose Keyword or Exact depending on the search you need.

Step 3. Select the correct record from the Search Results screen.

Step 4. In the IUCAT record look for the URL (for Electronic Resources available Online) or Holdings (for printed periodicals) to find what specific years and volumes are available at IUCAT's FORTWAYNE location.

Step 5. When the library owns the printed volumes you need, write down the call number and location. The call number and IUCAT Shelving Locations will help you determine where an item will be shelved in the library. Or if the resource is available online, follow the URL link to the full-text content.

Locating Books and Periodicals in the Library

Books, printed periodicals, and other library materials are shelved in Library of Congress Classification (LC) call number order. The call number and IUCAT Shelving Locations will help you determine on which floor of the library an item will be shelved.

Searching for Periodical Articles

The most efficient way of finding a high-quality periodical article , is to search a periodical database or index that provides descriptive abstracts, subject indexing, and often, the full-text content of articles. Check out the interactive Finding Articles Tutorial to learn the basics of choosing and searching the Academic Search Premier database. Below is a selection of databases useful for your course. For a complete list, see the library's Find Resources By... page. Select a resource by Subject, Title, or Type (choose Abstracts & Indexes).

Databases for this Course

CINAHL (Cumulative Index to Nursing & Allied Health Literature) (Ovid)

Content:

Provides monthly updated indexing of 1,200 English-language nursing journals, publications from the American Nurses' Association and the National League of Nursing, and primary journals from allied health disciplines, including consumer health, biomedicine, and health sciences librarianship, covering 1982 to present. Most articles include abstracts, and some also provide full text with graphics. CINAHL also provides access to healthcare books, nursing dissertations, selected conference proceedings, standards of professional practice, educational software and audiovisual materials in nursing. An online guide is available. For more details about CINAHL, select the information symbol from the database selection screen.

Access:

Database available to authorized IPFW users (on or off campus). IPFW library owns the printed index 1956-1997 (Reference Z6675 .N7 C8). IU Libraries' license allows 25 simultaneous users systemwide.

 

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Academic Search Premier (EBSCOhost)

Content:

Provides abstracts and indexing of articles in nearly 8,000 popular magazines, scholarly journals, and major newspapers, updated daily, in a wide range of fields including business, education, science and technology, health sciences, humanities, and social sciences, with nearly 4,000 titles available full text. Limit to scholarly, peer-reviewed articles or full-text articles only, if desired. Indexing coverage varies, with full-text content for some titles beginning 1975 or earlier, and most titles indexed from the 1990s. A complete list of titles covered is available.

Access:

Database available to authorized IPFW users (on or off campus). Database available to authorized IPFW users (on or off campus). Other Indiana residents with an Internet service provider not based in Indiana (AOL, MSN, EarthLink, etc.) must first register for an INSPIRE password account.

 

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Health Source: Nursing/Academic Edition (EBSCOhost)

Content:

Health Source: Nursing/Academic Edition provides access to more than 580 full-text medical and allied health journals, with a focus on nursing and allied health materials. Includes abstracts and indexing for more than 800 titles. Approximately 75% of articles are published in scholarly, peer-reviewed journals. Also included are USP Pharmacopoeia DI: Volume II Advice for the Lay Patient and Stedman's Medical Dictionary. Years of coverage vary by title but may extend to 1975.

Access:

Database available to authorized IPFW users (on or off campus). Database available to authorized IPFW users (on or off campus). Other Indiana residents with an Internet service provider not based in Indiana (AOL, MSN, EarthLink, etc.) must first register for an INSPIRE password account.

 

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PsycINFO (CSA)

Content:

An international database treating psychology and related disciplines such as social work, psychiatry, pharmacology, medicine, nursing, education, law, linguistics and business. Items included are journal articles, books, book chapters, reports, theses and dissertations. Most citations contain abstracts and many include cited references. Coverage begins in 1887. Updated weekly. Documents included are articles in more than 35 languages from an international selection of more than 1,700 journals and other serials, and conference papers, books and dissertations. A journal list is contained in the database.

Access:

Database available to authorized IPFW users (on or off campus). IPFW's license allows an unlimited number of simultaneous users.

 

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Is Your Article Scholarly or Popular?

University instructors often ask students to use articles from scholarly journals rather than from popular magazines for their research assignments. The following Is Your Journal Scholarly? (PDF) summarizes major differences between scholarly journals and popular magazines. Which type of source have you located?

What about Full Text?

Full text means that the text of the article is available in PDF or HTML digital format. Graphics and tables are not automatically included unless the database producer has rights to publish them. Many of the library's licensed databases offer the full-text content of periodical articles. IPFW students, faculty, and staff now have access to more than 20,000 full-text journals. Find them in E-Journal Finder.

When an article you need is not available full text in the database you are using, choose  to see all of your delivery options. You may be able to access the full-text content in another database, request the article from another library through Document Delivery Services, or make a photocopy of the article if the printed periodical is owned by Helmke Library.

When a Resource is Not Available in the Library

Request Delivery is an IUCAT feature that allows IPFW faculty, students, and staff to request materials held by other Indiana University Libraries and to have them delivered to Helmke Library (see the IUCAT Request Delivery Fact Sheet).

You may also request any item that is not available at Helmke Library through Document Delivery Services (DDS). DDS borrows books and provides photocopies of periodical articles from other library collections. The service is free for IPFW faculty, staff, and students.

Searching the Internet

For some information needs, the Internet may supplement library resources. To begin an Internet search, try one of the many search engines on our Internet Search site. One that works well is Google, which ranks results by number of links leading to a site. The section on Subject-Oriented Tools includes directories that have evaluated and selected sites for specific subject areas, such as the Librarians' Index to the Internet.

Because the World Wide Web is a massive, tangled directory of knowledge producers, research, facts, and entertaining tidbits of information, you must be critical about the material you find there. Quality and validity are not assured when anyone can publish anything, anytime, without the benefit of scholarly peer review. There are many useful guides and tutorials to help you understand how to navigate and evaluate Web sites, including Is Your Web Site Credible?

Finding Internet Sites for this Course

To begin an Internet search, try one of the many search engines on our Internet Resources and Guides page. One that works well is Google, which ranks results by number of links leading to a site. The section on Subject-Oriented Tools includes directories that have evaluated and selected sites for specific subject areas, such as the Librarians' Index to the Internet. Or use the Helmke Library Ready Reference Center, the Alphabetical Listing of U.S. Government Internet Sites, or the Indiana Subject Index to enter the Web from selected links compiled by IPFW librarians.

Essentials of Internet Use in Nursing (Stacks RT50.5 .E85 2002)

Handbook of Informatics for Nurses and Health Care Professionals (Stacks RT50.5 .H43 2001)

Health & Medicine on the Internet: a Comprehensive Guide to Medical Information on the World Wide Web (Reference R859.7.E43 H43 2003)

Nurse's Guide to Consumer Health Web Sites (Stacks RT50.5 .N85 2001)

Understanding Medical Information: a User's Guide to Informatics and Decision-Making (Stacks R858 .J67 2002)


Style Guides and Useful Tools for Writing

A variety of style guides are on reserve at the Service Desk on the first floor. These tools help you organize and write your paper, and format in-text references and bibliography lists.  For more information, also see our Style Guides and Writing Guides subject pathfinders.

Style Guides for this Course

The most frequently recommended style guide for nursing is the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (sometimes referred to as the APA style guide). APA's Web site presents examples of Electronic Reference Formats Recommended by the American Psychological Association.


And Finally, Ask a Librarian

Librarians and skilled information assistants are always available to assist you. Visit the Service Desk to meet an information assistant who will help you get started. You are welcome to make an appointment with Your Subject Librarian if you need more in-depth assistance.


Indiana University - Purdue University Fort Wayne

schultes@ipfw.edu

2101 E. Coliseum Blvd.
Fort Wayne, IN 46805-1499
260-481-6502
Fax: 260-481-6509

Stephanie J. Schulte M.L.I.S.


Reference & Information Services Librarian; Liaison to Biology, Chemistry, Consumer & Family Sciences, Dental Education, and Nursing; Science and Technology Information Center Coordinator
Helmke Library, LB 157

 
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