When researching your paper, you will want to include scholarly (academic) sources. These types of sources are more credible and reliable, and support your points better than more popular or general sources. Journal articles allow you to find more narrow aspects of a topic, whereas books usually give you broad overviews.
You may be tempted to use a search engine such as Google to find journal articles. After all, it's easy, and Google has everything, right? While Google does a good job searching regular websites and webpages, it can't access most journal articles, and doesn't have a way to easily limit your search to peer-reviewed journals. Even if you do find articles, you usually will be asked to pay to read the full text.
The Library has a much easier way for you to find free, full-text journal articles: library databases.
Databases are online resources accessed through the library website. They are subscription services, and the Library pays for their students and faculty to have access to these databases. Most databases are article databases. When you search something in these databases, you are searching through millions of articles, found in thousands of journals, magazines, and newspapers. Each database has a different set of journals they search through.
No two databases are exactly alike. Some databases only search journals in a certain subject field or discipline (subject-specific databases), while others are more general, searching through lots of articles from many different subjects. Some databases branch out past articles and provide other types of resources. Credo Reference, for instance, allows you to search a collection of reference books, and Mango Languages provides access to interactive lessons to learn more than 70 world languages.
Because the databases are subscription services, you have to log in to them a certain way. View the video below to learn how you can access the databases Santa Fe subscribes to.
The Library has more than 100 databases you can use, but how do you know which one is best for your research needs? When you access the database listings, you can limit a few different ways.
If you're not sure where to start, look to the left of the databases page to view our Recommended Databases. These are the top databases recommended by librarians and most used by students.
Academic Search Complete , the first database listed, is usually a great database to begin your research.
If you know the title of the database, scroll through the main list or use the linked letters at the top to view all databases in alphabetical order.
To find more specific databases that focus on your subject area, you can Filter databases by subject(s) in the first drop-down in the blue bar to see the best databases for your topic. Look for a subject category that encompasses your topic (such as Business or Science & Technology). Relevant databases will be listed within each subject category.
Here are the most used subject categories:
Access NewsBank | Video Tutorial | How to Cite
A collection of newspapers from the United States. Great for finding the latest news about certain issues, as well as looking back to see news articles from the last two decades. Includes the Gainesville Sun. See also NewsBank's Special Reports for a collection of newspaper articles on topics of current interest.
NewsBank from Lawrence W. Tyree Library on Vimeo.
This video tutorial will show you how to locate and access newspaper articles from the library database NewsBank.
To access library databases, click the gray Databases button on the library website.
NewsBank is listed in the Library’s Recommended Databases. This database allows you to search through newspapers from around the nation, including the Gainesville Sun. To access this database, click its title.
To log in, your username is your SF ID number @sfcollege.edu. On the next screen, enter your college password.
By default, NewsBank searches across a variety of news sources from within the United States. This includes newspapers, newswires, news magazines, and more.
If you do not yet have a topic, or wish to see which topics are currently in the news, you can browse the Suggested Topics area below the search box. For example, clicking Business and Economics provides categories such as Agriculture, Consumer Issues, and the Global Economy, with relevant topics listed under each.
Once you choose a topic, you will be taken to a preset search, with relevant articles in the results.
Another option to explore topics is the Special Reports section. Click the button on the right sidebar, under Quick Links, to view these reports.
Special Reports are updated frequently to reflect current topics. Reports consist of various articles, background data, images, and more resources.
Back on the main search screen, the blue buttons under Quick Links will allow you to quickly limit a search to the Gainesville Sun, major metro titles, or Florida newspapers. For this example, let's choose to limit to Florida Newspapers.
You can browse through the list of Florida news sources or search within these publications. Enter your keywords into the search bar, and click Search.
In the results, the first lines contain the title of the article. Listed underneath the title are the news source and the publication date. The icon next to the publication date indicates what type of news source it is, such as newspaper in the first example. The gray box on the right provides a snippet of where your keywords were found in the document. To see the full article, click its title.
If you need to limit your search further, you may use the filters on the left. You can limit to a source type, date, source name, and source location.
When you access the full text, the toolbar near the top provides you with options to Cite, Email, Print, and Download the article. You can also copy a direct link back to this article.
If your results are not as relevant as you would like, you may wish to use the Advanced Search option, which is under More Search Options.
One way to limit your results is to change the drop-down box to Lead/First Paragraph. This means your search terms must appear within the first paragraph of the article, and will often result in more relevant articles.
If you would like to limit your search to a specific section, such as an editorial, change the drop-down to Section and type editorial. This will bring back opinion pieces about the topic.
This concludes the video tutorial on NewsBank. If you still have questions, please contact a librarian:
352-395-5409
reference@sfcollege.edu
Building Y, NW Campus
sfcollege.edu/library
Access Health & Wellness | Video Tutorial | How to Cite
Best medical database the library offers for students who are not in a health sciences program; health science students will also find it useful. Offers an easy-to-use interface with access to full text nursing and allied health journals, encyclopedias and other reference sources, as well as informational pamphlets. Includes specialized searches for diseases/conditions, drugs & herbal remedies, and alternative health.
Academic Search Complete is a general, multidisciplinary database that is a great place to begin research on any topic. The following video tutorial will introduce you to accessing and using this database.
To limit to academic sources, check the Peer Reviewed box on the search screen.
Academic journals will have the Academic Journal icon in the results list.
Opposing Viewpoints provides searchable topics with pro and con articles, topic overviews, statistics, court cases, links to government agencies and special interest groups, newspaper, magazine, and journal articles and more about social issues. Opposing Viewpoints can be found in the Recommended Databases list.