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PSY 200 - Research Methods Lab (Fall 2016): Home

Page to support Psychology 200

How to Use This Guide

This guide was created specifically for PSY200. Use the tabs above to learn about the library and its resources!

mouse and a maze

Session Evaluation

At the close of the instructional session, please click on the link and complete the evaluation form. Your feedback will help us improve our instruction!

Basic Search Concepts

Keyword searching--Watch this tutorial from the University of Missouri-St. Louis. If your search term is a phrase, e.g., eating disorder, enclose the phrase in quotation marks. "Eating disorder" is a more specific search than typing the words separately.

Boolean operators (AND, OR, AND NOT) These words are used to combine your search terms. AND means that every word must be in your search results and will narrow your results. OR is used to connect similar concepts or synonyms and will broaden your results. OR IS MORE. NOT eliminates a word from the search and should be used with care.

Truncation--Use the asterisk * to retrieve all variants of a word. For example, educat* will retrieve education, educating, educator. But be careful! Con* will retrieve convict, contract, constitution and all other words that start that way. You will get many irrelevant items.

Field--A field is the location in the record where your terms are located, e.g., title, subject, author.

Get Help

Subject Librarian

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Sandy Stump
Contact:
Associate Library Director & Collection Management Librarian
Gingrich Library
Room 107, Center for Computing and Mathematics
(610) 921-7205