Research Tips
- Use web resources like Google and Wikipedia to START your research, just don't finish your research there. Use the Library Gateway--the Library's web interface to find scholarly resources.
- Use Wikipedia and other web sites "academically." Look for bibliographies and other lists of resources to add to your research.
- Use web sites to find keywords that can be used to search for books in the Library Catalog or for articles in Find it!
Where do you get your Information?
The Web can provide excellent starting places to do your research.
But if you are only using Google and Wikipedia to find your information, you may not be finding all of the information that is available on your topic. Especially if you are being asked to do scholarly research.
Three very important facts to remember about information:
Search Engines only retrieve a portion of the information available on the web.
A lot of useful information is not freely available on the web. It is proprietary, meaning someone--an author, a publisher, or institution--owns the information.
Not all digitized information is created equal.
You need to critically analyze and evaluate the information you intend to use.
Not all information has been digitized.
There are still books in the Library. And other print and analog resources that do not exist on the Web.
Find web resources that provide scholarly information.
Look for Get it! Cornell links to access full text articles from Google Scholar.
Using Google Scholar to locate Cornell University Library resources
CUL Labs
Ask Me Your Question |
Lance J. Heidig
104a Uris Library
Ithaca, NY 14853-5301
Phone: (607) 255-2954
Email: ljh5@cornell.edu
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Subjects:
Reference, Instruction, Collection Development, Cornell New Student Reading Project, Book Collection Contest
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