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Political Science

This research guide is intended to serve as an introduction to the resources the L.W. Tyree Library has on Political Science.

Search Strategies

binocularsWhen using the Library Catalog or one of the Library Databases you will need to convert your topic or research question into language the computer understands. The following search techniques will help you with this process.

Using Keywords

magnifying glassKeywords

The first step is to determine keywords that sum up the main concepts of your topic. Keywords are typically nouns or noun phrases. If you phrase your topic as a research question or thesis, you can often pull keywords from the topic sentence.

Example topic: Is forbidding the teaching of religion in public schools a violation of first amendment rights?

Keywords: forbid • teaching • religion • public schools • first amendment

Sometimes the keywords from your original topic sentence will not produce the types of results you want. When that happens, try to think of related keywords. These can be other words that have similar meanings, words that are broader (good for when you have too few results), or words that are more specific (good for when you have too many results).

Example related keywords:

Similar: instruction, "free-speech," "church and state"
Broader: culture, education
Narrower: elementary school, Christianity, prayer

Truncation

scissorsTruncation

Truncation (shortening your keyword) makes the database look at other possible forms of a word for which you are searching. Use truncation to find plurals and variations on the endings of a word. To truncate, use the asterisk symbol: *. You can enter this symbol by pressing Shift and 8 on the keyboard at the same time or by pressing the asterisk symbol on the number pad.

Examples:

  • You want to find the following terms: education, educate, educating

    Use educat*
     
  • You want to find the following terms: religion, religious

    Use relig*

Phrase Searching

 Phrase Searching

To find an exact phrase (i.e., words in a row in an exact order), enclose the phrase in quotation marks.

Examples:

  • "first amendment"
  • "church and state"
  • "school prayer"

Using AND and OR

Venn DiagramUsing AND

Combine keywords by putting the word AND between them. This requires that both keywords be present in the database's search results. Entries that include keywords connected by AND are referred to as search statements.

Example Search Statements using AND:

  • religion AND "public schools"

Note: If you use the Advanced Search feature of a database, AND is the default connector between the entry boxes:

Academic Search complete search box. Religion is in the first box. And is chosen. Public schools is in the second box.


Using OR

In cases where two keywords are equally good, and you don't need to have both of them, you can connect them using OR. This will require that only one of the two keywords be present in the results. To make sure these are not mixed up with any uses of AND in a search statement, enclose uses of OR in parentheses.

Example Search Statements Using OR:

  • "public schools" AND  religion AND ("first amendment" OR free speech)

ASC search. Public schools first box, AND, religion second box AND free speech OR first amendment in third box. OR is circled.

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