HI 2332: History of Science
C. Clark
While gathering general information and facts...
- Make a list of keywords and add to this list as you find more
- Follow up on relevant authors, researchers, experts
- Gather statistical information to build scope and impact of problem
- Consider all perspectives: historic, economic, social, political, etc.
Off campus?
Access resources with proxy.
Background Information
- The free web: search engines and other free web sites such as Wikipedia
- Grolier Encyclopedia and Encyclopedia Americana or Encyclopędia Britannica Online .
A Few Library Reference & Electronic Books
- Oxford Reference Online - check your Wikipedia facts
- Companion Encyclopedia of the History of Medicine. General Collection R131 C65 1993
- Scientific American inventions and discoveries [electronic resource] : all the milestones in ingenuity--from the discovery of fire to the invention of the microwave oven / Rodney Carlisle.
Information Choices: What Sources To Use
Use different types of information to get broad coverage of your topic. Historians use primary materials to build their research. See the Primary Sources guide for information on primary literature and how to find it.
Evaluate...
According to a study at Stanford, nearly half of all web site evaluators (46.1%) used visual cues, to assess a site's credibility. Move beyond what a site looks like...
- Authority
- Scope
- Currency
- Accuracy
When in doubt, review our Evaluating Web Resources Checklist (PDF).
Explore Web Sites with Reputable Sponsors
- Center for History of Physics
- History of Medicine - U.S. National Library of Medicine
- Center for History and New Media
- Internet History of Science Sourcebook
- National Archives - America's Historical Documents
- Library of Congress - American Memory
- Center for the History of Technology - Vintage Computer Sources
Books
Search the Library Catalog for items @ WPI or WorldCat to search beyond our library.
What does ARC stand for?
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How do you go about requesting the item? How long would it take?
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Find Articles about Your Topic
Start with Gale Powersearch to search for articles on all topics with some full text. Coverage: Contains articles from journals such as Isis, and The Scientist with indexing of 1000s of titles back to the 1980s. Good coverage of historical topics. Search tips: Try Subject Guide to explore topics. Click More Search Options to limit only to peer-reviewed publications.
worksheet using these three sources:
If you finish early, jot down one of the references you found here, in MLA style format.
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- Example of a work from a library subscription service:
- Gooday, Graeme J. N. and Morris F. Low. "Technology Transfer and
- Cultural Exchange." Osiris 13 (1998): 99-128.
- JSTOR. Gordon Library Worcester
- Polytechnic Institute, MA. 15 Mar. 2007
- <http://www.jstor.org>.
- Cultural Exchange." Osiris 13 (1998): 99-128.
What journal or magazine is this article from? Is it available in full text? Or just an abstract? If only an abstract is found, find the full text, using the library's Journals, Magazines, & Newspapers list.
Filter and Follow Up...
- Scan results: use subject headings/descriptors, keywords, phrases found to expand search
- Scrutinize article titles, number of pages, and journal title
- Browse promising abstract and conclusion sections of long studies
- Bibliographies can clue you in on the value of the article as well
- Find an interesting author? Search for more articles or for his/her web site
- Notice an agency, association or expert mentioned in an article? Follow up!
More, More, More: History Databases Galore
- Project Muse: Search full text of major historical and global studies journal, most academic sources.
- Humanities International Complete
- More History databases ...
Only Finding a Citation? Getting the Full Text
- Is the journal online or here in the library? Use
FullTextFinder to link to full articles or retrieval options within database results or search our Journals, Magazines, & Newspapers list
- Visit another library: Search WorldCat to find one
- Request delivery from another library: Interlibrary Loan.
Give Credit! Cite Your Sources
Try RefWorks, if you wish to create a database of your personal references, which can be output into MLA format for your bibliography.
Questions?
Maintained by lib-webmaster@wpi.eduLast modified: Feb 15, 2008, 10:37 EST
