CHABOT LIBRARY |
|
Psychology 2: Resources
Available at the Library
http://www.chabotcollege.edu/Library/handouts/Psyc2/Hughes.html
Library Home Page: http://www.chabotcollege.edu/Library/
Periodical Desk
and Microfilm Cabinets | Ebsco Host | Analyzing
the Article: Primary Source vs. Other Articles
Selecting
an Article | Emailing/Printing Articles
| APA Citation Format | Other
Library Resources
INDEX
TO PSYCHOLOGY JOURNALS AT CHABOT LIBRARY AND IN EBSCO HOST (Handout)
LINK
TO PSYCHOLOGY JOURNALS IN EBSCO HOST
| LOOK UP
PERIODICAL HOLDINGS IN: Chabot Library's Collection Library Subscription Databases Other Libraries' Collections |
QUICK APA
REFERENCES APA Citation Style Examples--References |
Why Journals and not Books
or Magazines for this assignment?
Because in the areas of the
sciences and social sciences which include Psychology, the latest scientific
research is published in journals. Books would be dated and
be too lengthy to handle for this type of assignment and popular magazines
in psychology rarely contain primary source articles. A journal is
basically a peer-reviewed periodical published on a regular basis with
articles that are written by scholars for scholars in a specialized field.
This handout will guide you to the journals, themselves, which are almost
always indexed with popular magazines.
Psychology Journals at the Periodical Desk and Microfilm on the Mezzanine
If you want to browse through journals, Chabot College does have a number of titles available in print at the Periodical Desk. The Periodical desk is located opposite of the main room of the Library, against the wall, next to the elevator. Go to the index to see what titles we have available and ask for a copy. A seven-day checkout is available for issues of a journal.
Chabot College Library also has a
number of titles available in the Microfilm format with some titles going back
to the 1950's or even earlier. The microfilm rolls are available in green
cabinets on the mezzanine. They are alphabetical, by journal, magazine,
and newspaper title. Microfilm readers are available against the wall, and
if you need assistance to load a microfilm reel properly, ask for assistance at
the Audio Visual Center Desk, which is to your right. The microfilm
readers also have photocopiers built in. Cost per copy is ten center per
page.
| Psychology
Journals in
Ebsco Host Databases |
Ebsco Host from Off
Campus:
http://search.ebscohost.com/login.asp
For login and password, contact the Reference Desk. |
Searching by Subject | Searching by Publication (Browsing Journals on Ebsco Host)
For this assignment, you
will want to use
Ebsco Host and search Academic Search Elite.
The On Campus and Off Campus links to Ebsco Host are on the left side of
the Library Home Page, http://www.chabotcollege.edu/Library/
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Select the databases you
want to search such as Academic Search Elite and click on
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If you get results you do
not want, click on
and perform a different search.
Take note that the following search terms will most often NOT WORK: primary source, experiment, descriptive study, correlational.
Usually you have to look
AT THE ARTICLE, itself, to determine if it is a primary source.
You can also search by ONE
TERM at a time by clicking on
.
If
you get results you do not want, click on
and perform a different search.o view your past searches, click on
.
Reading the Results List
Screen
The above diagram refers to how to read results on Ebsco Host, in general. Take note that for this assignment, you do not want book reviews, period.
Sometimes charts may NOT
appear on regular full text, so if Full Page Image is available,
you will want to view that version. You need to click on the Full
Page Image icon to view the full text which looks like this:
.
For some articles, you will
not see text below, but you will see this icon:
.
Click on the icon and the full text will appear. To be able to see
these pages, you must have Adobe
Acrobat on your computer. There is a free version available to
read documents. It is available at: http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html
To know how to look at the
contents of an article and to determine whether it is a primary or secondary
source, go to Analyzing the Article
Reading the Top of an Article
Notice in the example below,
that you can click on links to Subject Headings, the title of the journal/magazine
itself (Source), or the author's name. If you find a really good
article and want to find more like it, clicking on one of these may help.
Notice that the abstract does not make it clear that the article is in
fact a primary source article. You still need to look at the article,
itself, to discover that this article contains a scientific study on a
population.
| Title: | Maternal responses to the life and death of a child with a developmental disability: A story of... |
| Subject(s): | BEREAVEMENT; DEVELOPMENTALLY disabled children; MOTHER & child |
| Source: | Death Studies, Sep/Oct97, Vol. 21 Issue 5, p443, 34p, 2 charts, 2 graphs |
| Author(s): | Milo, Elizabeth Moult |
| Abstract: | Examines the bereavement experience of mothers who have lost a developmentally disabled child. Variables associated with optimal or complicated bereavement; Mothers' success in using cognitive coping strategies; Implications for helping professionals. |
You can browse journals on Ebsco Host very similar to how you browse journals from the Periodical Desk! The best way to do so is by following these directions:
Express Directions: Go to the Web version of this handout, Go to Index of Psychology Journals, click on the link that matches the journal title you want to search! Or follow the directions below if following the paper handout:


In general, you should always analyze and study an article, carefully, before selecting it for your research (let alone, printing it). For this assignment, you have to look at the article carefully enough to determine that it is a primary source. Your instructor should cover the differences between a primary source (examples: experiment, quasi-experiment, correlational or descriptive study) and a secondary source (examples: literature review, book review). You should also be able to look beyond any editorials or brief articles that do not focus on any type of psychological study at all. Here are some clues to guide you:
A primary source should be more than a couple pages long. While part of the article may review other experiments and studies done on a topic, that part should be limited to the introduction and should not cover the entire article. Most often, you will see the article broken down into categories such as Method, Measures, Procedures, Data Analysis, Results, and Conclusion. The wordings and number of such categories can vary. Studies usually will include exhibits, charts, or graphs as a visual to the data the author(s) have collected.
A secondary source will
be more of an analysis of other articles. The author(s) are not conducting
an experiment or study on his/her/their own. Instead, the entire
article discusses, evaluates and probes other studies. You, yourself,
will be creating a "secondary source" with the paper you will write for
this assignment.
Once you have selected an
article, you need to record the following so you can properly cite it.
| Author: | Title: |
| Title of Journal: | Volume, year, and page numbers: |
EMAILING ARTICLES
IN GENERAL, YOU MAY WANT TO E-MAIL ARTICLES INSTEAD OF PRINTINGIF YOU ARE IN THE LIBRARY, PLEASE EMAIL YOUR ARTICLES INSTEAD OF PRINTING, EXCEPT for PAGE IMAGE FILES.
PRINTING ARTICLES
This assignment asks you to cite materials using the guidelines set by the American Psychological Association (APA). Most of the courses you have here at Chabot usually ask you to cite materials according to the Modern Language Association (MLA). Basically, different disciplines have different guidelines as to how you cite your materials. As this is a Psychology course, it only makes sense to follow the guidelines professional psychologists and scholars use.
For this assignment, YOU DO NOT USE THE WORKS CITED FORMAT HANDOUT we give out at the Library! That handout follows the MLA guidelines.
Instead, to obtain APA guidelines,
use one or more of the following resources:
| Publication Manual of the American
Psychological Association
The official name of the APA citation manual |
Reserves: BF 76.7 P83 1994
Note: This is the 1994 edition. The Library is currently waiting for the arrival of the new 2001 edition. You will need to use Electronic References website listed below for online articles |
| Online Reference Shelf: APA Citation
Resources
You can also get to this site by clicking on Works Cited/Style Manuals on the left side of the Library Home Page, and then clicking on APA: Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association |
http://www.chabotcollege.edu/Library/onlineref/citation.html#apa |
| Research and Documentation Online--APA
Style: the Social Sciences
Excellent online guide to citing and quoting print and online resources |
Reference List:
http://www.dianahacker.com/resdoc/social_sciences/listref.html In-Text Citations: http://www.dianahacker.com/resdoc/social_sciences/intext.html |
| APA Style: Electronic References
As of the recent publication of the fifth edition, APA has officially ascribed citation rules for various electronic formats. An article taken from Ebsco Host would be an "Internet Article based on a Print Source" |
http://www.apastyle.org/elecsource.html |
Library Home Page
The selections on the right
side of the screen will lead you to the Library Catalog, databases to Magazine,
Journal & Newspaper Articles and more, handouts to this and other library
orientations, links to quality web sites and to other libraries
How to use the Library Catalog
http://www.chabotcollege.edu/Library/handouts/librarycatalog.html
Tips on how to use the Library Catalog
effectively when searching for books
About the Library and Its Services http://www.chabotcollege.edu/Library/abby/libraryinfo.html
Information on Library's
hours, checking out materials, the Student Computer Lab, Audio-Visual Center,
and more!
Psychology Resources on the Web http://www.chabotcollege.edu/Library/handouts/psych.html
This page will take you
to search engines and portals that search exclusively quality Psychology
web sites.
World Wide Web Worksheet and Web Evaluation
Checklist http://www.chabotcollege.edu/Library/handouts/wwwworksheet.html
http://www.chabotcollege.edu/Library/abby/evaluation.html
Learn how to search the
World Wide Web effectively and be get clues on how to find good sites vs.
the bad!
This handout is also available
at: http://www.chabotcollege.edu/Library/handouts/Psyc2/Hughes.html