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Media in a Hyper-mediated World: KLN 0873

Research help for Sherri Hope Culver's GenEd course, KLN 0873: Media in a Hyper-mediated World.

Videos on Types of Sources

Source Types

What Types of Sources Do I Need?

The Information Life Cycle

Videos on Search Strategies

Choosing Keywords

Putting Together Your Search Terms

Narrowing or Broadening Your Search

Use the Library Search

Library Search is your gateway to discover books, journal articles, and much more at Temple University Libraries. Additional information can be found in our Library Search FAQ's.

Search Effectively

magnifying glassUnlike Google, library databases often don't understand an entire sentence. So you'll need to break your topic down into the most important ideas - the keywords. 

  • What are important issues related to this topic? Are there specialized terms that experts on this topic might use? What aspects of this topic are being ignored?
  • Who are important people associated with this topic? Who writes about this topic, and whose voices are not being heard?
  • When did important events happen that might have influenced this topic? 
  • Where are important places that might have influenced this topic? What kinds of places are they? 
  • Why does this matter? Why should people care about this topic?
  • How does the information I have found change what I thought about this topic? How and why do different authors discuss this topic differently?

 

example of venn diagram using ANDUse the word AND to find only sources that mention both keywords.

Example: social media AND mental health 


AND lets you make demANDs with your search.

This search will bring back fewer results than searching either keyword on its own.

example of venn diagram using ORUse the word OR to expand your search with additional keywords.

Example: social media OR instagram 


OR gives you mORe.

This search will find sources that include either word, so you'll see more results than by searching for just one keyword.

Another suggestion is to try using the asterisk symbol ( * ). The asterisk is useful when you have word variations. Place the asterisk symbol at the end of the part of the word all of the variations share

 

example of venn diagram using both AND plus ORTry combining some of your related keywords together.

Example: mental health AND (social media OR instagram) 


This search will save you time from having to try each keyword combination one at a time.

Use "quotation marks" to search for words in a phrase, such as a proper name.

Example: "social media" AND "mental health"

 

search terms in a search box using quotation marks

This will bring back results that only use that exact phrase.

search results screenMost library databases have search tools built in. Try some of these:

  • Topic/Subject: think of these as official hashtags. Use them to find sources about that subject.
  • Date: limit your search to sources published between specific years
  • Resource Type: limit your search to specific kinds of sources (e.g. newspapers, book chapters, datasets)
  • Peer Reviewed: limit your search to scholarly journal articles

Look on the left and right of your search results, or for an "advanced search" page to find these tools - and more!

Find the Full-Text

Can't Locate Your Article Online?

  • Use the Available online icon link found in the Library Search or the Example of Find Full Text iconbutton available from most other databases to locate the entire article online.
  • If your article is not available in print or via another research database, request it via ILLiad (interlibrary loan).