While using
Proquest, I chose to search for articles on young authors. I clicked on the option of “Full text” as instructed,
and when the results page came up, I could immediately tell that I had done
something wrong. All of the articles
with the random words young and author in them appeared. I simply went back to the search page and put
the words “young author” in quotes. Then
the results page looked more like what I was looking for.
The tools
that looked useful on this page included the “Create Alert” option that was
mentioned in the instructions as well as the list of suggested subjects and the
ways to narrow or sort my search results.
Because I was given several hundred search results, I chose to sort my
results by publication date and narrowed the results by using only magazine
articles. Below the options for
narrowing the search results was a graph that could be used to quickly view
what time period most of the articles had come from and you could get more
detailed information by gliding the cursor over each year. You could also enter your own specific date
range. This would be very helpful for
students who need to have extremely current information.
The search
results for each article included the basic bibliographical information: title, name of magazine, date, page numbers,
and author. Each article on the results
page also gave links to a short preview, the citation/abstract, full text, full
text in PDF, and images when available. The
images where shown in a smaller version with each article. This makes it easy to know if the picture
will be of use to you before you open the link.
There is an icon before each article that stands for magazines, trade
journals, newspapers, scholarly journals, and other sources.
The preview
link gives several more link options for printing, saving, citing, exporting,
emailing, subjects, author, magazine, different databases that it was found in,
and people named in the article. These
options would be very helpful for learners looking for more detailed
information.
Another View
I enjoyed
looking at the other participant’s blogs because I had not had a chance look
much before now and, I hate to admit it, I am a first time blogger. I did discover two things right off the
bat. One, I am not as far behind as I
thought I was, and two, I must go on, and on, and on, and on . . . either that
or I use a way bigger fontJ. Maybe that
means my eyesight is fading as fast as my hearing! I did decide that I do rather like the blogs
that include cute pictures. What can I say, forever a kid at heart.
While using
the publications feature, I simply typed in the word “Library” and narrowed the
search by looking for it in the title only.
It brought up 20 different publications with the title, coverage,
publisher, languages, ISSN, and place of publication. Once I chose the title “The Electronic
Library” I was able to browse specific issues, search within the publication,
view the most recent issue, and set up an alert.
Great comments, Mighty Mel! Students will also appreciate the array of citation options. We like ProQuest for its breadth of popular, trade, and scholarly material. It's great to be able to read hard-to-find journals cover to cover 24/7.
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