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Purdue Libraries and School of Information Studies News

Social Sciences Full Text – HSSE Featured Database

November 24th, 2021

Humanities, Social Science and Education Library’s Featured Database will give you a very brief introduction to the basic features of one of our specialized subscription databases. This time we’re featuring Social Sciences Full Text database, brought to you by EBSCO.

Link: https://guides.lib.purdue.edu/db/ssft

Access the databases off-campus with your Purdue login and password.

Focus: This database provides access to more than 150 important journals published in social sciences, with full text access dating back to 1972. This includes the latest concepts, theories, and methods in both applied and theoretical aspects of social science.

Tutorial: Click here see the basics of using the Social Sciences Full Text database.

Why you should know this database: This database provides access to a wide assortment of the most important English-language journals published in the U.S. and elsewhere with full text and page images from scores of key publications, plus abstracting and indexing of hundreds of others.

Quick tip: On the preview window, there is a link for the Detailed Record. If you click on this link, to the left side of the page, you will see a link for find similar results. You can use this to generate a new results list that share similar keyword and subjects as the article you selected originally. This is a great way to expand your research.


Related Resources:

Another database you might want to explore is:

Sociological Abstracts: https://guides.lib.purdue.edu/db/socabstract
JSTOR: https://guides.lib.purdue.edu/db/db347


Combining Evidence Synthesis, Infodemic Management, and Participatory Design Practices to Understand How Health (Mis)Information Spreads in African American Communities

November 1st, 2021

Professor Bethany McGowan

In July 2021, Libraries Professor Bethany McGowan was awarded an Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) planning grant to conduct research that seeks to understand how health information, including misinformation and disinformation, originates and spreads in African American communities. The planning grant will lay the foundation for a larger project grant proposal that will focus on developing an OER course or series of courses that teach library workers and information professionals to develop health literacy interventions that are culturally sensitive, inclusive, and equitable. Throughout the grant’s two-year timeframe, Professor McGowan will work with researchers from Howard University and Carnegie Mellon University to conduct a systematic review, carefully analyzing and synthesizing evidence from published literature. Her team will also execute a participatory design study to actively involve and listen to project stakeholders. The results of the systematic review, combined with those of the participatory design study, will inform the later design of the OER course(s).

This IMLS award follows McGowan’s acceptance into and completion of the highly competitive World Health Organization Infodemic Management Training in November 2020. Infodemic management is the systematic use of evidence-based analysis and interventions to manage mis/disinformation campaigns, mitigating the harmful effects of health misinformation on health behaviors during acute health events. During the training, McGowan upskilled her ability to respond to and deploy interventions that protect and mitigate misinformation and its harmful effects, evaluate the design and effectiveness of health communication interventions, and design health literacy interventions and health communications campaigns that strengthen the resilience of individuals and communities to misinformation and disinformation. Elements from the training are carefully threaded throughout her project’s action plan.

Though this IMLS-funded planning grant marks Professor McGowan’s first time leading a systematic review, systematic analysis and evidence-based practice have long been integral to her research, instruction, and outreach. In 2016 she helped launch the Libraries’ systematic review service and in 2019 she co-developed and co-taught a graduate-level course on systematic review methodology, an experience documented in a recent JMLA case report. She has co-authored several systematic reviews and meta-analyses alongside health sciences researchers and has co-taught an evidence-based practice Nursing course. And, she has worked with the non-profit Evidence Aid, helping to collate and summarize evidence that emergency responders and decision-makers use to prepare for and respond to disasters and emergencies


Gale Literature – HSSE Featured Database

October 28th, 2021

Humanities, Social Science and Education Library’s Featured Database will give you a very brief introduction to the basic features of one of our specialized subscription databases. This time we’re featuring Gale Literature database, brought to you by Gale.

Link: https://guides.lib.purdue.edu/db/literary

Access the databases off-campus with your Purdue login and password.

Focus: This database brings together several resources, including Gale eBooks, Gale Literature Criticism, Children’s Literature Review, and many others. Full-text articles from scholarly journals and literary magazines are combined with critical essays, work and topic overviews, book reviews, biographies, and more to provide a wealth of information on authors, their works, and literary movements.

Tutorial: Click here see the basics of using the Gale Literature database.

Why you should know this database: Using this database will allow user to search across various premier Gale literature resources to discover and analyze content in new ways.

Quick tip: To the top right side of the screen, there is a button called Cite. If you click on this button, another window will appear with the full citation in several different citation styles. Select the one you need to copy and paste to your bibliography. However, do double check the citation. Occasionally, there are errors.

Related Resources:

Other databases you might want to explore are:

JSTOR: https://guides.lib.purdue.edu/db/db347
Literary Reference Center Plus: https://guides.lib.purdue.edu/db/lrcp


Dr. Kristina Bross Receives the 2021 Leadership in Open Access Award

October 26th, 2021

Provost Akridge and Dean McNeil with Dr. Kristina Bross, recipient of the 2021 Leadership in Open Access Award

Libraries is pleased to announce that Associate Dean for Research and Creative Endeavors in the Honors College and Professor of English Kristina Bross is the recipient of the 2021 Leadership in Open Access Award. Dr. Bross is a staunch supporter of scholarly dissemination and open access, as demonstrated by her many projects completed in collaboration with Libraries.

Dr. Bross has always been eager to innovate and think creatively in order to provide exemplary learning experiences for students. As a member of the faculty advisory board for the Journal of Purdue Undergraduate Research (JPUR), Dr. Bross is strongly invested in the journal’s success as an open access platform for undergraduate research endeavors. In collaboration with Purdue University Press and Archives and Special Collections, Dr. Bross edited a special collection of essays by Purdue undergraduates. Each participating student began their journey by exploring Archives, where they discovered, researched, and then wrote an essay about a piece of Purdue history that illuminates the student experience a century ago. The resulting book, More Than a Memory: Exploring Purdue University’s History Through Objects, was published by Purdue University Press in 2017, and is openly available to all.

During the summer of 2020, in the midst of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, Dr. Bross again turned to Libraries for collaboration in developing new engagement opportunities for students in remote learning environments. Together, Libraries and Dr. Bross sought to answer the question, “What do we do when face-to-face engagement is impossible?” The result of this latest open access collaboration is IDEAS Magazine: Exhibit Catalog for the Honors College Visiting Scholars Series

Dr. Bross sums up IDEAS Magazine this way: “The inaugural issue of Ideas Magazine was created as a way to open up the Visiting Scholars series to more people—to offer contextual material about our visitors and their work and provide links to the recorded interviews. The pieces included in the issues of the magazine were created by students—members of the Visiting Scholars seminar and a talented team of student editors. Volume 1 is an experiment. A draft. A collaborative pilot project. A pandemic-driven pivot from in-person forms of learning to online, asynchronous learning. We built the plane while we were flying it…No doubt we’ll have to open up the engine again to tinker with it to get it really soaring. But it’s off the ground!”

Libraries is honored to recognize Dr. Bross for her creativity, leadership, and ongoing commitment to open access projects like these, and is proud to be a collaborative partner in her remarkable story of student engagement, opportunity, and success.


Welcome to International Open Access Week 2021

October 25th, 2021

 

International Open Access Week begins today. For many working in open scholarship, this is a time to reflect on Open Access and the role it plays in the dissemination and access of scholarly works. Open Access refers to the free, immediate, online availability of scholarly works, including rights to re-use that content. Open Access scholarly works are free from requirements that readers or libraries pay to read, otherwise known as paywall restrictions. 

Paywalls restrict access to scholarship, creating inequities in information access. Scholars at institutions that can afford to pay have access to cutting edge scholarship and research. Scholars at less advantaged institutions, those in the developing world, and K-12 educators and learners, experience limited access if they have access at all. What’s more, the cost of access to scholarship and research continue to rise at rates that exceed university budget increases. In the end, everyone experiences less and less access to scholarship.

Across the wider scholarly communication system, there is a growing awareness that the current system of paywall restrictions and rising subscription costs is financially unstable. Consequently, we are seeing a global shift towards transparency and openness in the dissemination of research. Key stakeholders are using collective bargaining and collaborative efforts to move towards openly sharing scientific discoveries. What’s more, scholarly publishers are responding to pressure from key stakeholders and offering more paths to open. 

There are many benefits to publishing scholarship using an open model. Open scholarship can be more easily accessed, and is more readily used. Open scholarship is more likely to be used by policy makers as well as practitioners and technicians in the field. It is more highly cited. In addition, since educators cannot teach scholarship that they cannot afford to read, open works are more likely to be used in teaching and learning.

While open access works are free to read, they are not free to publish. With open access, the costs of scholarship have been moved away from consumers to other places. Often, the costs of publishing are moved to authors, in the form of article processing charges (APCs). This is commonly known as Gold Open Access. For many researchers, the fees associated with open access publishing offer an impassable barrier to publication. For others, this means diverting precious research funds to publication fees. Fortunately, Purdue Libraries continues to provide support for open scholarship, including funds for payment of fees as well as building new relationships with publishers that allow free Open Access publishing for Purdue scholars.

Nina Collins, Scholarly Publishing Specialist


Kanopy – HSSE Featured Database

October 14th, 2021

Humanities, Social Science and Education Library’s Featured Database will give you a very brief introduction to the basic features of one of our specialized subscription databases. This time we’re featuring Kanopy database, brought to you by Kanopy.

Link: https://guides.lib.purdue.edu/db/kanopy

Access the databases off-campus with your Purdue login and password.

Focus: This database is offers over 50,000 films from thousands of leading producers. These titles include many genres, including documentaries, movies, and training videos.


Tutorial: Click here see the basics of using the Kanopy database.

Why you should know this database: This streaming service offers thousands of titles, including videos by PBS, Criterion, and Media Education Foundation. If our subscription does not offer access to title needed for a course or other learning opportunity, you can request that we gain access to that title. Also, there are many titles available through Kanopy that have public viewing rights.

Quick tip: Kanopy offers a list of related videos based on title you are viewing.


Related Resources:

Other databases you might want to explore are:

Ambrose Video: https://guides.lib.purdue.edu/db/ambrosedigital
Docuseek2: https://guides.lib.purdue.edu/db/docuseek2


Physical material searching unavailable from Oct 8, 6 PM – Oct 10 6 PM

October 7th, 2021

Search and Request for books and other Libraries items unavailable during October Break.

Featured Database: SimplyAnalytics

October 5th, 2021

Parrish Library’s Featured Database will give you a very brief introduction to the basic features of one of our specialized subscription databases. This time we’re featuring SimplyAnalytics, brought to you by SimplyAnalytics, Inc.

Focus

SimplyAnalytics contains extensive data including demographic, housing, employment, consumer spending (CEX), D&B business points-of-interest, and marketing data from Mediamark Research (MRI).

Why Should I Know About This Database?

SimplyAnalytics enables users to quickly create thematic maps and reports using thousands of U.S. demographic, business, and marketing variables. Users have access to SimmonsLOCAL consumer behavior data with information on over 8,000 brands and 450 unique categories. Additionally, the EASI Life Stage Clusters classification system is available. Data is available at the State, Congressional District, County, City, ZIP Code, Census Tract and Block Group level as well as custom trade area and the entire United States.

Access

The List of Business Databases is the alphabetical list of the databases specially selected for those in a business program of study. Access the databases off-campus with your Purdue Career Account.

Tutorial

Click Getting Started with SimplyAnalytics to see the basics of using this database.

Related Resources

Some other resources you might want to explore are:

  • Frost and Sullivan, provides the latest technology, company, econometric, demographic, and industry information.
  • MRI Simmons Insights, formerly Mediamark Internet Reporter, provides information on demographics, lifestyles, product and brand usage, and advertising media preferences.

Featured Database comes to you from the Roland G. Parrish Library of Management & Economics. If you would like more information about this database, or if you would like a demonstration of it for a class, contact parrlib@purdue.edu. Also let us know if you know of a colleague who would benefit from this, or future Featured Databases.

Since usage statistics are an important barometer when databases are up for renewal, tell us your favorite database, and we will gladly promote it. Send an email to parrlib@purdue.edu.


Please Plan Ahead: Search and Request for books and other Libraries items unavailable during October Break

September 28th, 2021

 

A simplified, multi-campus search and request system for books and other physical items in our Libraries collections is coming to Purdue and its regional campuses beginning Spring 2022. This new Fulfillment Network system will allow Libraries patrons from PWL, PNW, and PFW to locate and request physical items from libraries on all three campuses through a single search interface.

To allow completion of technical requirements related to this critical project, search and request functionality for physical items via the Libraries website will be out of service beginning Friday, October 8th at 6 PM.  Search and request functionality should be restored within 48 hours, during which time most library locations will be closed for October Break. 

This outage will not impact “My Account” functionality or electronic resource access.  Physical item results and availability information will be the only records affected. Thank you for your patience and understanding as we work to improve our systems and services for all Boilermakers.

 


Featured Database: PrivCo

September 14th, 2021

Parrish Library’s Featured Database will give you a very brief introduction to the basic features of one of our specialized subscription databases. This time we’re featuring PrivCo.

Focus

A premier source for business and financial data on over 300,000 major, non-publicly traded corporations, including family owned, private equity owned, venture backed, and international unlisted companies.

Access

The List of Business Databases is the alphabetical list of the databases specially selected for those in a business program of study. Access the databases off-campus with your Purdue Career Account. PrivCo does require users to register a new account before use.

Tutorial

Click Getting Started with PrivCo to see the basics of using PrivCo.

Related Resources

Some other resources you might want to explore are:

  • Business Source Complete, contains major company profiles and SWOT reports.
  • Mergent Online, includes financial statements, company news, industry analysis, historical information on M&A activity, country information and more.

Featured Database comes to you from the Roland G. Parrish Library of Management & Economics. If you would like more information about this database, or if you would like a demonstration of it for a class, contact parrlib@purdue.edu. Also let us know if you know of a colleague who would benefit from this, or future Featured Databases.

Since usage statistics are an important barometer when databases are up for renewal, tell us your favorite database, and we will gladly promote it. Send an email to parrlib@purdue.edu.