Library Guides: English 1 Current Issues

Instructor: Diane Miniel
Librarian: Gina Haycock
November, 2009

REFERENCE BOOKS:
Located on the first floor of the library behind the Reference Desk.  These books must remain in the library. Reference books include dictionaries, almanacs and encyclopedias. Specialized or subject encyclopedias (concentrating on a particular subject instead of covering all knowledge) are excellent starting points for research. They are focused on a particular topic, cover the major concepts of the topic, are written by experts in the field, and often have bibliographies or other references.

 Examples of Reference books in the COS library are as follows:

Statistics:
Statistical Abstract of the United States    #R317.3 Un58    This resource is also available online at the following URL:    http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/
The World Almanac and Book of Facts    #R317.3 W927

Subject Encyclopedias: (a small sampling of what is available)

Encyclopedia of American Social History (3vol.s)    #R301.0973 En56
American Immigrant Cultures (2vols.)    #R305.8 A512
Child Poverty in America Today (4vols.)    R362.7086
Encyclopedia of White Collar & Corporate Crime (2vols.)    #R364.168 E56
The World of Tattoo    #R391.65 H587

International Encyclopedia of Women and Sports (3vols)    #R796.082 In61

Online Reference Books:
Gale Virtual Reference Library - Gale provides access to 200 reference books. All the books are full-text and cover a wide variety of topics including art, science, literature and much more. All 200 titles can be searched simultaneously or individual titles may be selected. (Cost $20,000)

CredoReference - Credo provide full-text reference books on a wide variety of subjects (Cost $2500)

CIRCULATING BOOKS: Located on the second floor of the library. Our newest books are, for the most part, in the areas of science and social issues, and current topics, because we try to build the collection to the type of assignments given to students.  The COS Library online catalog is linked to the COS Library home page.  Opposing viewpoints is a series of books on controversial issues that is helpful in narrowing a topic. In the COS catalog the following search will retrieve the available titles in this series:

The results can then be sorted by title.

ONLINE BOOKS:

  • NetLibrary E-books: Electronic full-text copies of published print materials, such as reference books, scholarly and popular books. They can be accessed from any computer on campus as well as remotely from home when you set up a user name and password from a campus computer

PERIODICALS INDEXES AND DATABASES: Located on the first floor of the library. Periodicals refer to information printed over a period of time such as magazines, journals and newspapers. These are excellent sources for current and authoritative information. To find an article on a specific topic, it is necessary to use an index.  Indexes are available in paper and electronic formats. The library subscribes to approximately 15 indexes,  250 periodicals and 11 newspapers.  For a list of which periodicals and indexes are available at COS click on the link: http://www.cos.edu/library/periodicalsalpha.htm .  For periodicals that the COS Library does not have available, there is also the possibility of an Inter-Library Loan from Fresno State University.

ALSO, through the Academic Electronic Databases link, http://cos.edu/library/electronic.htm, on the COS Library’s Web Site, there are links to the electronic index subscription databases that the library makes available to COS students. Many of these indexes offer full-text articles, which means the entire article will be available even if the library doesn't subscribe to the periodical itself. If a student is off campus, passwords are necessary to access these databases. Passwords are available for COS students at the COS Library Information Desk or by calling the Library at (559) 737-6179.

Here are some general guidelines to think about before typing anything in the search boxes:

  • Allow plenty of time for searching, depending on your topic getting good results may take longer than you think.

  • Allow time to read the article before emailing or printing, especially, when doing a key word search, because you may get false hits.

  • Choose the most appropriate database for your topic.

  • Take time to look at the search screen as a whole and make choices appropriate to your topic or assignment.

  • Focus on getting precisely what you are looking for, not how many results you get.

  • Use Boolean operators: and, or, not, whenever appropriate or allowed by the software. This option is often available in advanced search.

  • Identify key words and possible subject headings and synonyms.

  • Remember: Subject headings are words used to describe an article. Key words are words actually found in the article. For Example:

KEYWORDS AND SUBJECTS TO USE IN THE  DATABASES AND/OR CATALOG

Poverty Asian Americans Credit cards--United States Women athletes
United States--Economic conditions Asian Americans--Cultural assimilation Consumer credit Sports for women
United States--Social conditions Asian Americans--Ethnic identity United States--Economic conditions Feminism and sports
Poor--United States Asian Americans--Social conditions Consumers--United States--History Sex discrimination in sports
Rural poor Asian American children Consumption Sports--Sex differences--United States
Hunger--United States Asian American--Intellectual life Consumer behavior  
Poverty--California Acculturation Child consumers  
Food supply Children of immigrants Debt  
Poor children Intercultural communication    
Child Welfare Asia--Emigration and immigration--History--20th century    
Poor families Hmong Americans    
Fatherless families Refugees--United States--History--20th century    
Single-parent families      

DATABASES FOR CONTEMPORARY ISSUES:    (These databases are full-text)

  • CQ Researcher - Your complete source on the most current and controversial issues of the day with complete summaries, all the pros and cons, bibliographies and more. (Annual Cost $523)
  • SIRS (Social Issues Research Series) - SIRS contains all full-text articles from a variety of newspaper and magazines covering current social issues.  (Annual Cost $1440)

DATABASE FOR SCHOLARLY SOURCES:   

  • Expanded Academic ASAP (Infotrac) - Provides articles from more than 500 scholarly, trade and general-interest publications, as well as references for The New York Times. The databases integrate core titles in every major academic concentration; area  and issue-specific journals; academic journals with application in the professions; and publications with national news coverage and commentary.  (Annual Cost $9,732)
  • (This database is NOT completely full-text.)
  • ProQuest - is a mega-database that contains 17 databases including many scholarly journals but magazines and newspapers also. (Annual Cost $19,000)

DATABASES FOR LOCAL COVERAGE:    (These databases are full-text.)

  • Fresno Bee This full-text database covers 1985 to the present (Annual Cost $2,310)
  • Los Angeles Times - This full-text database covers 1985 to the present

WEB SITES FOR CONTEMPORARY ISSUES:

SEARCH ENGINES:

Google Advanced Scholar

  • Searches diverse sources

  • Finds papers, abstracts and citations

  • Ranks articles by full text of article and how often  the article has been cited in other scholarly literature.

Healthline

  • Searches the top health sites on the Web

  • Retrieves related search terms developed by doctors and physician specialists

  • Provides doctor-reviewed information as well as news on the topic

FirstGov Search

  • Provides free electronic access to  information produced by the Federal Government. The information provided on this site is the official, published version and the information retrieved from GPO Access can be used without restriction, unless specifically noted.

  • Provides a search by topic box.

Scirus

  • Searches over 250 million science-specific web pages.

  • Retrieves  reports, journal articles, and peer-reviewed journal articles.

MLA STYLE CITATIONS:

From the OWL (Online Writing  Lab) cite at Purdue University, this link provides the new 7th edition version of MLA citations: http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/557/01/

From California State University, Los Angeles' University Library, this link provides the new 7th edition version of MLA citations: http://www.calstatela.edu/library/guides/MLA7.doc  

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This page was created: October, 2009   This page was last updated: 11/04/2009
For Questions and Comments, please mail to ginah@cos.edu