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March 2008
Online Research When Google and Wikipedia Are Not Enough
After more than ten years behind the reference desk, Heather Whipple cannot stop informing strangers and annoying friends by constantly pointing out that "you might be able to get that from a library."
Why Bother?
I am a huge fan of Google and Wikipedia and use them all the time. My intent with this article is not to dissuade anyone from these resources but rather to encourage you to add some new tools to your research repertoire.
Ask a Librarian
When I say "ask," I don't mean you have to go to the library or pick up the phone (not that there's anything wrong with that). Many public libraries have email reference service, and a growing number offer IM or chat reference. Find your local public library website and see what they offer. University and college libraries may be happy to help community members and alumni. You can even Ask a Librarian of Congress. An increasing number of online-only groups of librarians offer research support. The Internet Public Library has a mission to "provide library services to Internet users...and direct assistance to individuals." Radical Reference is "a collective of volunteer library workers" that started as an information service for demonstrators and activists during the 2004 Republican National Convention in New York City and has evolved "to answer information needs from the general public, independent journalists, and activists." The online community Second Life has a full-service library with several specialty branches; visit the Info Island blog to learn more about what they're doing.
Sometimes You Feel Like a Book
If it's only a few pages you want to read, try to search for them using amazon.com's "Search inside this book" or Google Book Search. Both have an archive of scanned images that cannot be comprehensively viewed, copied, or printed due to copyright and license agreements. However, it is sometimes possible to construct a search that brings up the page or two you want to see.
And Sometimes You Don't
Several states have state-wide subscription agreements, so that even tiny libraries with tinier budgets can afford to offer such databases to their communities. The downside is that many of the databases have deeply stupid and uninformative names, like Infotrac, MAS Ultra, or Academic Search Premier. Luckily, the content makes up for it. Traditional reference tomes are increasingly available as ebooks, again possibly available to you at home from your library's website. The online Oxford English Dictionary, the complete Encyclopedia Britannica (without ads), handbooks of this and encyclopedias of that: more and more of them are out there, just not by way of Yahoo Search or ask.com. The resources I've mentioned here are just a few examples, and more are showing up all the time. Find your library's website and see what's available; you may be pleasantly surprised.
More Internet, Please
Highwire Press free fulltext articles and The The Directory of Open Access Journals provide search interfaces for finding scientific and scholarly research articles that are available online for free. Google Scholar can also identify academic articles, but many of its results will have fulltext links that require a subscription or a fee. In that case, check back with your library to see if you can get the article through their databases. I hope your experience of the Internet is like mine, that the number of excellent, exciting, fun, useful websites you learn about is ever increasing (for example, if you haven't checked out the feminist science fiction wiki, take a look). It's easy to get overwhelmed by all the good stuff, and of course it's often well camouflaged by waves of the, shall I say, less good. Taking advantage of online services like Ask a Librarian or fulltext article databases can make your research process more efficient, leaving time for the really important things, like inter-species communication or personal growth and development. And, of course, your writing. |
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