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GEL 101 Library Module (Haro)

Melanie Chu
Outreach Librarian
KEL 3426
mchu@csusm.edu
(760) 750-4378

Office hours (KEL 3426):
Wednesdays 12-1 pm

Emails, drop-ins, and appointments welcome.


What is the GEL Library Module?

The Library Module will introduce you to the basics of college-level research.
The skills you learn during the module will help you for 2 main reasons:

  • specifically, for the presentation you will do in this class.
  • in general, for the papers and projects you will be expected to do
    for the rest of your college career.

     


Schedule, Topics, and Assignments

Attendance and participation are mandatory for the 6 Library Module sessions. Students who are excessively or regularly late will not receive credit for attendance.

Appropriate classroom behavior is required (e.g. no iPods, text messaging,
eating, sleeping, etc).

Each in-class activity and homework assignment is for credit and must be completed on time.
No late work will be accepted without prior approval.
 

 In-class activities/attendance (5 x 15 pts)   75 pts
 Homework assignments (4 x 15 pts)   60 pts
 Quiz   15 pts
 Total  150 points

 

Note: The Office of Disabled Student Services provides a variety of services and resources to students. Students with disabilities should contact me immediately to ensure appropriate accommodations are made during the Library Module.
 

Day 1- March 12

Intro to college level research (from UW-Madison Libraries)
In-class activity: Critical review including APA style
Advanced internet searching

Homework #1: Critical Review -- Website                                

Day 2- March 14

Website evaluation review (from Widener University)
In-class activity: Popular vs. scholarly articles
Finding articles
In-class activity: Find an article and answer WebCT questions
Homework #2: Complete and answer WebCT question

Day 3- March 19

Search strategy review
Identify keywords (thesaurus) and thesis statement
In-class activity: Critical Review-- Popular Article
Open research time

Day 4- March 21

Library call #s and subject headings (activity)

In-class activity: Finding books and media (CDs, VHS, DVDs)                     

Mid-module review
Homework #3 Complete and answer WebCT question

Day 5- April 2

Plagiarism and academic honesty
"The Contradictions of Academic Writing"
In-class activity- citing in text, summarizing
Homework #4: Critical Review-- Scholarly article or book chapter
Review for quiz

Day 6- April 4

Pulling it all together
Group presentation outline Microsoft Word Document
Effective PowerPoint Presentations
In-class activity- Quiz
Evaluation

 

Sample Critical Review Microsoft Word Document

 

 

Extra credit-- 15 points

Extra credit needs to be typed and printed out, due by Wednesday, April 4th.
  • Visit the current library exhibit (3rd floor gallery, near the main entrance). Write a response paragraph (approx. 1/2 page), including your thoughts and reactions to the exhibit. For example, what do you think the exhibit is about? Why is it on display in a library? Describe your reactions to one or two parts of the installation.



 

Citing sources

For every college paper and project, you will need to document where you got ideas and quotations from (see Academic Honesty below).
 

Book Cover APA: Publication manual of the American Psychological Association.  5th ed. Washington, DC : American Psychological Association, 2001.
KnightCite A free online citation tool to help create your bibliography.

In order for the citation to be accurate, you will still need to understand the difference between a journal and magazine, volume and issue number, and so on. You will need to review the results for accuracy.
 







 

Writing a critical review

For most college papers and projects, you will need to investigate and report on the scholarly research related to your topic-- in other words, establishing what has already been said. To do this, you must read and critically review each of your sources with the following 4 points:

  1. Cite source in APA style.

  2. What are the qualifications of the author?

  3. What is the main idea of the source?

  4. Include one quote from the source.

A critical review includes a citation (in proper APA style depending on type of material) AND review (responding to the above questions in complete, well-written sentences) for each of your sources.

SAMPLE CRITICAL REVIEW Microsoft Word Document



 

Points of critical review
Sample formats and explanations
 
1. Citation

Where did the source
come from?
 
 

Author, A., & Author, B. (Year). Title of article. Title of periodical, volume         
     (issue), pg-pg.

Depending on type of material (e.g. article, book, website), give full citation
in APA style. Try KnightCite, a free online citation tool.
 

 

2. Qualification of author(s)

Why should you trust what
the author has to say?

If the author is an organization
or company, what do you know
about them?

(1 sentence)
 

SAMPLE FORMAT

Dr.____ is a professor of [subject] at the University of ____.
                  researcher

____ is a staff writer for [title of] newspaper
              reporter                     magazine.
              journalist

____ is a non-profit organization that does the following ____.
              company
              government agency
 

NOTES
  • A professor/researcher has a PhD and is an expert in their field.
  • A journalist/staff writer is a generalist (writing about any current topic), not an expert.
  • An organization may conduct research or disseminate knowledge to further their cause.
  • A company is for-profit, and might be trying to sell something.

 

3. Main purpose

What are the key points/
main ideas of the source?

 
(1-2 sentences)
 

SAMPLE FORMAT

This scholarly article proves ____.                 This newspaper shows ____.
       book                                                           magazine
                                                                         website
The main point of this source is ____.
      key idea


NOTES

You might note if the source has a strong bias or point of view:

The author(s) have a biased opinion on ____, because of ____.
      organization       balanced
      company           well-researched

  • Bias is a point of view that is one-sided, based on opinion rather than research, and without consideration of the "sides" of an issue.

  • A viewpoint (e.g. hypothesis or thesis) that is based in research is not biased... the research has proven their point!

 

4. Quotation

How does this source
support your research?

(1 "quote" or sentence)

 

SAMPLE FORMAT

Author (Year) says, "____" (pg #).

According to Author (Year), "____" (pg #).

This source provides historical background that prove ____.
                              statistics                         disprove
                              case studies                    show
                              quotes                            
                              opposing viewpoints
                            
 






 

 

Scholarly vs Popular articles

 

 

Scholarly (peer-reviewed, refereed, academic)

Non-scholarly (popular)

Audience

academic readers

general audience

Author

researchers, experts, specialists

journalists, free-lance writers, generalists

Vocabulary

professional jargon; may be difficult to read

common; easy to understand

Structure

specific structure (e.g. abstract, methodology, data, results, conclusion, references)

structured like a story; can look glossy with pictures and ads; comparatively shorter

Sources

long list of bibliography, references, footnotes

no bibliography or references listed

Examples Ethnic and Racial Studies; Gender & Society; International Migration Review; American Journal of Public Health; Latin American Perspectives Time; Newsweek; Business Week;
US News & World Report; New York Times; Christian Science Monitor


 





 

Finding articles

Research databases search hundreds of journals, magazines, and newspapers-- both scholarly and non-scholarly articles.

Try searching these research databases:
 



NOTE:
Depending on your topic, other databases might be more relevant.
You can choose a
database by subject.



Think you can find all this stuff on the Internet? Not for free!

See an article you want in one of these databases?

  1. Look for "Full Text" in pdf PDF, HTML Full TextHTML, Linked Full TextLinked or  Check SFX for Availability
  2. If all else fails, fill out an Interlibrary Loan article request form. You'll get it within 5-10 days for FREE.
  3. Or, any time you need help, ask a librarian!

 




Find an article and answer these questions in WebCT:

  1. What kind of information does this database contain: scholarly or popular articles, or both?

  2. Does it cover one subject area (e.g. biology, history) or a mix of subject areas?

  3. How do you get full-text-- or is it all full-text?

  4. How do you save, email and print?

  5. What is one advanced search feature in this database?





 

 

Finding books

Library Catalog --for books (print and electronic), media (DVDs, VHS, CDs), and periodicals (journals, magazines, newspapers) in our library.

         Map to find materials in Kellogg Library.

The Circuit (UCSD, SDSU, USD, SDCL) --for books we don't have at CSUSM (delivered to our check out desk in 1-2 days).




 



Academic honesty

What is academic honesty?

A major principle of higher education is student development of critical thinking skills and original scholarship. According to our Academic Honesty Policy: "The integrity of this academic institution, and the quality of the education provided in its degree programs, are based on the principle of academic honesty."

Academic honesty includes:

  • accurate use and representation of quotations.
  • explicit citation of sources when paraphrasing and describing ideas or any aspect of the work of others.
  • all forms of academic work-- exams, papers, presentations, and other projects.

To best understand academic honesty, you must know what is considered dishonest, or academic misconduct.
Plagiarism and other forms of cheating are defined here in the General University Catalog. pdf

 

Related resources:

 



 

Effective PowerPoint design


Keep in mind:

  SIMPLICITY

 
  • When slides are cluttered with words, bullets and statistics, the audience will be too busy reading to pay attention to you.
  • The rule of thumb is "6 by 6": no more than 6 lines of text and 6 words per line per slide.
  • No more than one topic per slide. This will also help prevent reading right off the screen.
  • Go easy on the special effects, animation, charts, tables and clip art.
  • DO select powerful images. A picture can be worth a thousand words.
     

 AESTHETICS

 
  • Is the background too busy or distracting?
  • Light colored fonts against darker backgrounds are easy for the audience to read.
  • Is the font large enough and easy to read?
  • Overall, is the presentation professional looking and visually appealing?
  • Remember the importance of non-verbal communication-- good posture and eye contact gives you more credibility.

 

  TIMING

 
  • How long is the allotted presentation time? Are there enough slides or too many?
  • PRACTICE beforehand to time the speaker and slides accordingly.
  • Repetition = Retention. Make your main point or argument clear in the beginning, support it during your presentation, and recap before the show is over.

 


Additional PowerPoint design resources from:


 

Need more help?

Don't hesitate to contact me for research help.

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We'd like to hear from you!

Send Email or call (760) 750-4340


Last Modified: Wednesday, March 12, 2008