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Library

Research Workshop

anth/soci 660

Susie Breier

Susie.breier@concordia.ca

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Susie Breier (she/her/elle)Your Subject Librarian

AskSusie Office Hours �on Zoom �Wednesdays 4:30-6:30 pm

AskUs Desk Fridays 3-5 pm

or by appointment

Email: susie.breier@concordia.ca

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FIND ME:

  • Google: �concordia library sociology

concordia library anthropology

  • concordia.ca/library/guides/sociology
  • concordia.ca/library/guides/anthropology

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your library

RESEARCH

guide

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TODAY

  • Zotero / reference management / citations
  • Accessing stuff
  • grad services + spaces / library tour
  • searching for academic sources
  • your questions & comments

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ZOTERO

SAMPLE FOOTER TEXT

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  • what is it?
  • why use it?
  • how?

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SOME ZOTERO BASICS

ZOTERO instruction SLIDES

ZOTERO Grad Workshops at Concordia

ZOTERO Group/Shared Libraries

Quick Videos:

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ACCESSING STUFF

SAMPLE FOOTER TEXT

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Accessing Stuff: Sofia

  • Find what we own: books, videos, articles �
  • REQUEST material from Quebec University Libraries & libraries around the world�
  • quick topic searches�
  • Introductory Video:
    • Searching Sofia

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YOUR TURN – Sofia searching

Search for one of these BOOKS and let us know: how can you get it?�

  1. The Knowing by Tanya Talaga
  2. Mouths of Rain: An Anthology of Black Lesbian Thought
  3. Sexy feminism : a girl's guide to love, success, and style

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Requesting stuff from other libraries: Sofia

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Quick How-to Videos:

    • Requesting Books (print books)

    • Requesting Articles & Chapters (online)

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Accessing Stuff: Google Scolar bonus

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TODAY – checklist 1

  • Zotero / reference management / citations
  • Accessing stuff
  • grad services + spaces / library tour
  • your questions & comments
  • searching for academic sources

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LIBRARY

grad services & spaces

SAMPLE FOOTER TEXT

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LIBRARY

grad services & spaces

  • WHY BOTHER?
  • WHAT SHOULD EVERY STUDENT KNOW?

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Support for Grad Students

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your requests 1

- Library guide to freemium toools

TIP: might need to do some Googling to find these kinds of things. Or…..

Are there licenses and resources that we can use to correct our texts, or make studying easier. - Kahoot, Antidote, Quizlet, etc.?

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your 'real life' AI research tools & tricks

Write first, then ask chat gpt to review what you have writen bold any spelling/gammar mistakes as well as ask where the weaknesses are in the paper. It is really good at pointing out where to improve.

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Getting help in the Library

  1. Ask Us desk, chat, email or phone

FOR ANY QUESTION UNDER THE SUN

Google: ask concordia library

2) Contact your subject librarian

FOR MORE IN-DEPTH CONSULTATIONS

Icons on this slide are from the noun project

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Susie Breier (she/her/elle)Your Subject Librarian

AskSusie Office Hours �on Zoom �Wednesdays 4:30-6:30 pm

AskUs Desk Fridays 3-5 pm

or by appointment

Email: susie.breier@concordia.ca

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FIND ME:

  • Google: �concordia library sociology

concordia library anthropology

  • concordia.ca/library/guides/sociology
  • concordia.ca/library/guides/anthropology

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TODAY – checklist 2

  • Zotero / reference management / citations
  • Accessing stuff
  • grad services + spaces / library tour
  • searching for academic sources
  • your questions & comments

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SEARCHING for ACADEMIC SOURCES in ANTHROPOLOGY & SOCIOLOGY

SAMPLE FOOTER TEXT

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find good sources on your topic

where would YOU search?

TELL YOUR NEIGHBOUR

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your favourite 'real life' research tools & tricks

Studying with peers and brainstorming with them; asking them their resources, or share a subscription together!

Throwing buzzwords at the wall (Google Scholar) and seeing what sticks

Using pop culture and news as more grounded research. Seeing what non scholars are saying on the topic is beneficial to understand how the general public view my topic.

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find sociological or anthropological academic sources on your topic

NOW where would you search?

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your questions - 2

What is the best source to find original writings on classic authorial frameworks? (Ie; Durkheim, Marx, etc) ?

I would like to know how to efficiently find sources on a specific theme within our field.

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�ACADEMIC RESEARCH TOOLS

  1. Sofia
  2. Library Databases
  3. Google Scholar (and competitors)
  4. GenAI-based Research Tools

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�ACADEMIC RESEARCH TOOLS - �Sofia

  1. Sofia
    • Discovery Tool for Concordia Library - and beyond
    • use to access known items at Concordia - and beyond
    • unsophisticated & unsatisfying for advanced searching
    • can use to search for books

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�ACADEMIC RESEARCH TOOLS 2

  1. Sofia
  2. Library Databases
  3. Google Scholar
  4. GenAI-based Research Tools

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�ACADEMIC RESEARCH TOOLS –�Library Databases

2. Library Databases (400+ at Concordia Library):�

  • by Subject/Discipline. ex: Anthropology Plus & SocINDEX
  • by Type of souce: scholarly encyclopedias, news, film/video, government publications….
  • Advanced search options: boolean searching, filters by date, format/source, peer-review; subject indexes; but little or no natural language capabilities
  • Subsciption-based, ‘legitimate’ search tools with replicable search results
  • Often no match for Google Scholar for wide-ranging, “needle in a haystack”, very recent searches

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Library databases �& tools

examples to try:

Discipline specific article databases:

Interdisciplinary, citation tracking

  • Web of Science (ISI)

Reference & review /overview sources

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Found some articles?

save them to your Library or Collection:

ZOTERO

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Now what do you do with those saved entries in Zotero? How do you create citations and reference lists?

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Library Databases & tools

FINDING THEM

Concordia Library website:

  • Subject Guides

  • Database Finder

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why does it matter where you search?

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search strategies

& keyword combinations

SAMPLE FOOTER TEXT

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‘Standard’ Library Databases -sample search - Advanced Search mode

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(“queer space*” OR “queer place*”)

AND

�(urban OR cities OR metropol*)

AND

(exclu* OR marginali*)

see also this handout

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�ACADEMIC RESEARCH TOOLS 3

  1. Sofia
  2. Library Databases
  3. Google Scholar
  4. GenAI-based Research Tools

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�ACADEMIC RESEARCH TOOLS –�Google Scholar

3. Google Scholar:

  • Effective for wide-ranging or “needle in a haystack” searches
  • “Cited by” feature for snowball searching, finding RECENT sources
  • No advanced filters such as source type, peer-review
  • Keyword searching only, no subject indexes
  • Results not fully replicable, search algorithms and source list hidden
  • Can set it up to access Concordia online resources

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Comparison�Library Databases vs Google Scholar

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(“queer space*” OR “queer place*”)

AND

(urban OR cities OR metropol*)

AND

(exclu* OR marginali*)

(“queer spaces” OR “queer places”)

(urban OR cities OR metropolitan OR metropolis)

(exclusion OR marginalization)

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Search strategies: Boolean operators and more

  • use OR for alternative terms / ideas / synonyms

  • use quotation marks " " for phrases

  • DON'T need to use AND (it is implied)

  • DON'T use * (happens automatically)

  • use OR for alternative terms / ideas / synonyms

  • use quotation marks " " for phrases

  • use AND to combine concepts

  • use * to substitute word endings

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GOOGLE SCHOLAR

LIBRARY DATABASES (EBSCO etc)

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ACADEMIC RESEARCH TOOLS 4

  1. Sofia
  2. Library Databases
  3. Google Scholar
  4. GenAI-based Research Tools

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GenAI based Research Tools

SLIDE SET:

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Search results Perplexity AI tool

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Search results Scite AI tool

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TODAY – checklist 3

  • Zotero / reference management / citations
  • Accessing stuff
  • grad services + spaces / library tour
  • searching for academic sources
  • your questions & comments

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Citations & References

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Thoughts about citing and citational practices

This is a challenge for all of us:  Reflect on the way you approach referencing the work of others in your own writing, presenting and thinking. Whose work do you build on to make arguments ... Who are you citing, and why do you cite them (and not others)?�Eve Tuck, K. Wayne Yang, Rubén Gaztambide-Fernández,"Citation Practices" Critical Ethnic Studies, April 2015

I believe that bibliographies and endnotes and references and sources are alternative stories that can, in the most generous sense, centralize the practice of sharing ideas about liberation and resistance and writing against racial and sexual violence. �Katherine McKittrick, "Footnotes (Books and Papers Scattered about the Floor)", Dear Science and Other Stories, 2021

See also, from our Critical Information Literacy Toolkit: Who's Citing Whom and Inclusive Voices

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THOUGHTS ABOUT CITING

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SCHOLARLY CONVERSATION

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CITATION BASICS

Next set of slides adapted from those of Aeron MacHattie​, Teaching & Research Librarian

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REMINDER:

Use a CITATION STYLE GUIDE!��Examples:

    • Chicago quick style guide

    • APA quick style guide (for articles, books, chapters)

    • More style guides with more details & examples

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HOW, WHEN & WHERE ��TO CITE

HOW

  • Use only one citation style per paper
  • Use automatic citation generators (optional)
  • Use a citation style guide (APA, MLA , Chicago)
  • Identify what your source is before you cite it

WHEN

  • Information or facts that are not common knowledge
      • ex. the Eiffel tower is in Paris vs. the Eiffel tower receives 7 million visitors per year
      • both “direct quotes” and paraphrasing

WHERE

  • In-text citations at the end of the sentence
  • End-of-text citations in a list of sources (References)

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IN-TEXT CITATIONS

  • Come at the end of the sentence where you quote or paraphrase a source

  • Refer the reader to a complete list of sources at the end of your paper

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IN-TEXT CITATIONS: DIRECT QUOTES

Hakkinen and Akrami (2014) found that “individuals are receptive to climate change communications, regardless of ideological position” (p. 65).

APA

Hakkinen and Akrami (2014) found that “individuals are receptive to climate change communications, regardless of ideological position” (65).

Chicago

author-date

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IN-TEXT CITATIONS: PARAPHRASING

People from any ideological background are open to hearing about climate change (Hakkinen & Akrami, 2014).

APA

People from any ideological background are open to hearing about climate change (Hakkinen and Akrami 2014)

Chicago

author-date

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END-OF-TEXT CITATIONS: REFERENCE LIST

  • Come at the end of your paper in an alphabetized list of all the sources you used�
  • Consist of thorough citations containing all information needed to successfully identify each source�
  • Sometimes called a bibliography (Chicago notes & bibliography), references (Chicago author-date, APA) or works cited (MLA)

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END-OF-TEXT CITATIONS EXAMPLE:�APA JOURNAL ARTICLE REFERENCES

References

Doherty, T. J., & Clayton, S. (2011). The psychological impacts of global climate change. American Psychologist, 66(4), 265-276.

Hakkinen, K., & Akrami, N. (2014). Ideology and climate change denial. Personality and Individual Differences, 70, 62-65.�

McCright, A. M., & Dunlap, R. E. (2011). Cool dudes: The denial of climate change among conservative white males in the United States. Global environmental change, 21(4), 1163-1172.

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END-OF-TEXT CITATIONS EXAMPLE:�CHICAGO AUTHOR-DATE JOURNAL ARTICLE REFERENCES

Reference List

Doherty, Thomas. J., and Susan Clayton. 2011. “The psychological impacts of global climate change.” American Psychologist 66, no. 4: 265-276.

Hakkinen, Kristi, and Nazar Akrami. 2014. “Ideology and climate change denial.” Personality and Individual Differences 70: 62-65.�

McCright, Aston M., and Riley E. Dunlap. 2011. “Cool dudes: The denial of climate change among conservative white males in the United States.” Global environmental change 21, no.4: 1163-1172.

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BOOK CHAPTERS: APA & CHICAGO

Guillen, R. (2017). Growing Justice in the Fields: Farmworker Autonomy and Food Sovereignty. In D. G. Peña, L. Calvo, P. McFarland, & G. R. Valle (Eds.), Mexican-origin Foods, Foodways, and Social Movements: Decolonial Perspectives (pp.235-250). Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press.

APA

Guillen, Rosalinda. “Growing Justice in the Fields: Farmworker Autonomy and Food Sovereignty.” In Mexican-origin Foods, Foodways, and Social Movements: Decolonial Perspectives, edited by Devon Gerardo Peña, Luz Calvo, Pancho McFarland, and Gabriel R Valle, 235-250. Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press, 2017.

CHICAGO

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TIPS FOR PARAPHRASING

  • Make sure you aren’t keeping the same structure as your source quote and only replacing a few words with synonyms (Thesaurus plagiarism)
  • Try reading the quote you want to paraphrase, setting it aside and writing it in your own words
  • Any set of words in the same order as your source needs quotation marks

Practice paraphrasing and other quotation skills with the library research skills tutorial

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RESOURCES AND HELP

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AUTOMATICALLY GENERATED CITATIONS

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BIBLIOGRAPHIC MANAGERS

Programs that build a database of your research material.

At Concordia we use: ZOTERO

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REMINDER:

Use a CITATION STYLE GUIDE!��Examples:

    • Chicago quick style guide

    • APA quick style guide (for articles, books, chapters)

    • More style guides with more details & examples