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NTSC 1112 - Fall 2024 Library Session

Assignment

Part A Tasks Due Oct 21 11:59 PM  10%

Your group chooses an indicator to research, see the open-source textbook list “Some Indicators of Global Environmental Stress” (Frank, 2019: pp. 34-37), or other current issue.

Specifics:

  1. Choose your group of 3–4 students.

  2. Choose an indicator of environmental stress (from Frank, 2019, or another valid source).

  3. Research three or four current stories/articles that appear to fit your indicator.

  4. The group will analyze the stories/articles, reporting your findings on each as follows:

  • name the media source, story, author

  • list the points of view that the story's author utilizes

  • for each point of view, briefly state how the environment is perceived within that view

  • in Part B you will evaluate the claims by the author for their science backing and relevance to the issue


Part B 20% - Presentation due week of Dec 2. Summary Due Dec 5

For this assignment you must demonstrate that you have made an effort to do something significant that helps the environment.  


NTSC 1112 focuses on current critical environmental issues. We have linked these to sustainable development and the United Nations 17 Sustainable Development Goals.


This term the group presentation assignment asks you to consider your global environmental stress and your personal environmental footprint in the framework of the international United Nations 17 goals. The presentation should be no more than 10 min.

Specifics:

  1. Evaluate the claims in the articles from Part A

  2. Select one of the 17 United Nations Goals that has a clear link to the global environmental stress indicator that you chose to investigate further. Discuss why you chose that goal. You should include a hypothesis of whether the goal will be achieved in the anticipated timeframe based on your part A research.

  3. Plan and execute several (three is a guideline but depends on complexity) activities that would help mitigate your global environmental stress while supporting your chosen Goal. Support your activity with evidence. The more complex the project, the better the grade.

  4. Discuss the challenges you faced in completing your activity.

  5. Discuss the impact of your actions on the community.

  6. Provide your personal reflections on the exercise.

  7. Presentation: Does your presentation captivate? Is there a clear call to action? Credibility?

Conducting Academic Research With LibrarySearch 

LibrarySearch is MRU Library's one-stop search interface/catalogue that brings together resources across format, time, and subject. 

We have millions of e-resources and 221,000 physical resources in our collection, and LibrarySearch searches across those.

Things to remember when using LibrarySearch:

  1. Sign in to save searches, items, and to request materials.

  2. Use the pin icon to save books and articles to your Favorites for future reference.

  3. Use the filters on the right. You will use Availability, Resource Type, and Date filters most often. Filter settings can be "locked in" so that you don't have to reapply them to every search that you make.

  4. Some items may not be available, however, you can request unavailable items using what is called interlibrary loan.

  5. When viewing an item record, scroll down to the Get it (for hardcopy/physical items) or Access options (for electronic items) section to get access to the item.


Helpful Search Operators to Use in LibrarySearch

You can use what are called search operators to search in a way to combine or omit different terms by telling the search engine exactly what you want and this can help you save some time (and frustration!)

  • Use quotation marks to keep specific phrases together:

    • "wastewater treatment"

    • "drinking water"

    • "forever chemicals"

  • Use AND to combine search terms (LibrarySearch automatically creates an AND when you write terms one after another, but it can be good practice to use an AND to help you understand the searches that you build) (AND narrows your search):

    • "drinking water" AND "forever chemicals"

  • Use OR to connect two or more similar terms (OR broadens your search):

    • deforestation OR "forest clearance" OR "forest management"

  • Use wild cards to substitute a letter or suffix with a symbol:

    • sustainab* (in this example, the search sustainab* will search for records that contain strings such as sustainable and sustainability)

Conducting Academic Research With Google Scholar

Google Scholar

Google Scholar is another great way to find high quality resources.

Besides providing links to resources in MRU databases, Google Scholar links to online repositories that contain articles the author has been allowed to upload.  Academia.edu and ResearchGate are among the repositories searched by Google Scholar.

By clicking on the Settings icon, you can select library links to show library access for up to 5 libraries (type in Mount Royal and click on save).  If you are logged into MRU library, links should automatically populate if you are running a Google search in another window. 

Google Scholar has a nifty citation chaining function. The Cited by function will forward you to indexed scholarly material that has cited a resource that you may be interested in. The Related articles link will direct you to similar articles that may have the same metadata or keywords. 


Helpful Search Operators to Use in Google Scholar

Google Scholar's Advanced Search is found by clicking the menu icon in the top left.

You can also add search operators to Google Scholar searches to build your own custom advanced searches in similar ways to LibrarySearch:

  • Use quotation marks to keep specific phrases together:

    • "climate change"

  • Avoid using AND to combine search terms with Google Scholar, as the search engine automatically creates ANDs between concepts and sometimes adding an additional AND can confuse the search syntax.

  • Use OR to connect two or more similar terms:

    • deforestation OR "forest clearance" OR "forest management"

  • Use wild cards to substitute a letter or suffix with a symbol:

    • sustainab* (in this example, the search sustainab* will search for records that contain strings such as sustainable and sustainability)

Scholarly vs. Popular Sources

scholarly publication contains articles written by experts in a particular field. The primary audience of these articles is other experts.

Many of these publications are also referred to as "peer-reviewed," academic, or "refereed." They all mean essentially the same thing and refer to the editorial and publication process in which scholars in the same field review the research and findings before the article is published.

 

Scholarly / Peer-Reviewed

Popular / Not Scholarly (but possibly still credible!)

Author

  • Expert

  • Journalist / professional writer

Review Process

  • Reviewed by an editorial board or other experts ("peers")

  • Reviewed by an editor

Audience /
Language

  • Scholars and students

  • Technical language

  • General public

  • Easy to understand

Content

  • Original research

  • Uses previously published literature for background

  • News and practical information

  • Uses a variety of sources for background 

Sources

  • Always cited

  • Sometimes cited

Examples

  • Peer-reviewed articles

  • Scholarly books

  • Literature reviews, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses

  • Theses and dissertations

  • Magazine articles

  • Newspaper articles

  • Blog articles

  • Encyclopedias

  • Textbooks

  • Websites

  • Social media


Some Helpful Questions for Identifying a Scholarly/Academic Article

  1. What are the author’s credentials? Was it written by an expert?

  2. Was it published in a journal (is there a DOI?)? (If you are not sure if a source is a journal article, you can enter the title of the publication into Ulrichs Web to check.)

  3. Does it use academic or more technical language?

  4. Does it includes a reference list of sources that it is citing?

  5. How long is it? (Scholarly articles are typically longer than popular or news articles.)

  6. Does it have a "Received" and "Accepted" date on it?

  7. Is it an actual article? (Sometimes other types of content are included in scholarly publications, such as editorials/opinion pieces and book reviews. Make sure you are looking at an article.)

Evaluating Information in General

Figure 1

Peter Steiner's Famous 1993 New Yorker Cartoon Illustrating an Issue Central to Information Evaluation


Note. From "On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog" [Cartoon], by P. Steiner, 1993, Wikimedia (https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/f/f8/Internet_dog.jpg).


Evaluating Information

It is good to find lots of search results, but, in order to use information skilfully, you need to know how to evaluate that information to determine whether a specific resource is appropriate to use in a specific use case (i.e. for a specific assignment).

The phrase "evaluating information" actually stands in for a wide range of judgments that we make about information in many different contexts, whether those judgments are about relevance, timeliness, quality, etc.

Librarians have developed several different acronyms to help people remember useful criteria to use in information evaluation. One of my personal favourites is RADAR!


RADAR stands for

Relevance

Authority

Date

Accuracy

Reason for Creation


We can ask the following questions to help us assess each criterion:

Relevance:

  • Does this source fit my topic?

  • What is this source's intended audience?

    • Is that intended audience appropriate for my use case in this assignment?

Authority:

  • Is/are the creator(s) of this source clearly identified or known to us?

  • How important is it in this use case to trust the source's creator(s)?

    • If it is important, why should we trust the source's creator(s)?

    • Is the source's creator credentialed or an expert in their field?

Date:

  • Is the creation or publication date of this source identified or known to us?

  • Is this source too old?

Accuracy:

  • Do this source's facts "check out"?

  • Does the source have references of its own?

Reason for Creation (take your best guess at this question using judgments from earlier criteria):

  • Why was this source made?

  • Was this source made to sell a product or service, to inform/educate, to entertain, etc?


Evaluating Sources (For This Assignment)

 

Peer review

  • Has the article been reviewed by experts prior to publication?

  • Does the journal have a peer review policy (that you can find on the journal's website - see this for example)?

Audience (academic vs. popular)

  • Who is the main audience for the work?

  • What does that mean for the way that the information is presented/framed in the article?

Original study, review, editorial/opinion

  • Is the article an original research study, a study that combines results from other studies, or an opinion article?

Author

  • What is the author's expertise?

  • Do you judge the author to be credible and to be writing from a position of authority?

Source (including date)

  • What is the reputation of the source (e.g. journal)?

  • How recent is the article?

  • Is the journal relevant to the topic being discussed (i.e. scientific discipline vs. other)

 

Activity: Is It Scholarly?

To make sure we are all on the same page, let's put our knowledge to the test.

Skim the following resources available through the links keeping in mind the characteristics we have discussed in class (for example: what is this information and where did it come from? Was it written by an expert? Where is this source published?).

Vote whether you think this source is Scholarly or Not Scholarly.

 

Scholarly: 18 votes (50%)
Not Scholarly: 18 votes (50%)
Total Votes: 36
Scholarly: 27 votes (93.1%)
Not Scholarly: 2 votes (6.9%)
Total Votes: 29
Scholarly: 21 votes (77.78%)
Not Scholarly: 6 votes (22.22%)
Total Votes: 27
Scholarly: 6 votes (21.43%)
Not Scholarly: 22 votes (78.57%)
Total Votes: 28
Scholarly: 6 votes (23.08%)
Not Scholarly: 20 votes (76.92%)
Total Votes: 26
Scholarly: 22 votes (84.62%)
Not Scholarly: 4 votes (15.38%)
Total Votes: 26
Scholarly: 7 votes (30.43%)
Not Scholarly: 16 votes (69.57%)
Total Votes: 23
Scholarly: 4 votes (15.38%)
Not Scholarly: 22 votes (84.62%)
Total Votes: 26

Citation Help

Librarian

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Joel Blechinger
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Contact:
Email: jblechinger@mtroyal.ca
Phone: 403.440.8624
Office: EL4423E
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