Sunday, October 23, 2016

WEEK 9 More Citations



PART ONE
1.
Allardt, E. 1993. “Having, Loving, Being: An Alternative to the Swedish Model of Welfare Research.” In Martha Nussbaum and Amartya Sen, eds., The Quality of Life, 88-94. Clarendon Press, Oxford.

a. What:          Pages from a book
b. Where:        I searched for it in Search it and kept it open for all of the Vancouver campus plus the summit libraries and it is available at the Holland/Terrell Libraries Stacks.
c. How:           I would have to request the book through the summit library.

2.
Beck, Ulrich. 1992. Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity. Sage, London.

a. What:          Book
b. Where:        I searched for it in Search it and kept it open for all of the Vancouver campus plus the summit libraries and it is available at the Holland/Terrell Libraries Stacks.
c. How:           I would have to request the book through the summit library.

3.
Dake, Karl. 1991. “Orienting Dispositions in the Perception of Risk: An Analysis of Contemporary World Views and Cultural Biases.” Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology 22 (1): 60-81.

a. What:          An article from a periodical journal.
b. Where:        Was not able to find it through Search It in WSU libraries + summit but was able to find it through EBSCO, searching through all databases.
c. How:           No WSU library has it available and will have to request it through ILLiad services.

4.
Fischhoff, B. 1990. “Psychology and Public Policy: Tool or Toolmaker?” American Psychologist 45: 647-653.

a. What:          Journal Article
b. Where:        Was not able to find it through Search It in WSU libraries + summit but was able to find it through EBSCO, searching through all databases.
c. How:           After pressing the, “Find it @ WSU,” button, ProQuest had the article available for download.

PART TWO
1.
Bahrick, L. E. (1992). Infants’ perceptual differentiation of amodal and modality-specific audio-visual relations. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 53, 180 –199.
a. What:          Article from a Journal
b. Where:        Found it using Search It and opened the search to all libraries. It is available through both the Vancouver library and as a PDF download through Science direct (Elsevier).
c. How:           By clicking the link for, Elsevier SD Backfile Psychology Supplement, after selecting the, “Access options”, link.

2.
Berlin, B. (1994). Evidence for pervasive synesthetic sound symbolism in ethnozoological nomenclature. In L. Hinton, J. Nichols, and J. Ohala (Eds.), Sound symbolism (pp.  76 –93).  New York:  Cam- bridge University Press.

a. What:          Print Book
b. Where:        I found it through Search it and it is available at the Holland/Terrell Libraries Stacks.
c. How:           I Would have to request it through the library Search It.

PART THREE

I have to say, I do not normally look for articles, or sources, the backwards way. However, this week’s lesson was not terribly confusing and I seemed to have the hang of it. There was an area where I had trouble finding an article. I believe it was number three but I had to constantly click through stuff to find how I could request it and I am not even sure if I found an accurate requesting option. In the future, I could see myself using this technique because it would be whole lot easier to find more source I would need for any research project. Sometimes just searching, using only key words or phrases, does not always cut it.

1 comment:

  1. Hi Amanda, good work with this. It looks like you were very resourceful in searching for the two journal citations in part 1, but remember that you can also search by the journal title in Search It, limited to WSU Vancouver, and that should tell you whether we have the journal, either in print or online. Everything here looks good, although I would add that the second citation in part 2 is for a book chapter (note the word "In" before the book information), and I would like to see the citation for the article where you found these.--Sam

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