Posts Tagged ‘research’

How do I use Special Collections?

Monday, September 24th, 2012

Penrose Library has many different types of materials in addition to books, DVDs, and microforms held in our regular circulating collections.  We also have  broad variety of rare and unique items held in our Special Collections and Archives.   These items include books, newspaper clippings, photographs, posters, DU meeting minutes and historical documents, even hats!

You may come across items that list Special Collections as their location while searching the library’s online catalog or you can search the library’s Special Collections and other unique materials using Digital DU (http://digitaldu.coalliance.org/), the University of Denver’s digital repository.  Digital DU provides a deep, full-text search of many archival collections, including digital access to historical photographs, text, audio, and video.

Special Collections and Archives is located in Aspen Hall during the Academic Commons Building Project.
During this time, collections will be stored off-site.   Please use the online request form to schedule a research appointment and request materials during this time.  For more information you may also email archives-l@du.edu or call 303.871.3428.

Does Penrose Library offer transcription services?

Monday, June 11th, 2012

While Penrose Library doesn’t offer transcription services (for example, for interviews), we’ve done some research to help you find such services in the area.

First, if you are a student or faculty member at DU, check with your department to see if there are students or others the department can recommend to provide transcription services.

Second, we recommend you look through the listing of members of the American Transcription Association at ataus.org.

The following is a sampling of services available in the area with basic cost information to show what typical rates for such services are. The information below was obtained from the service providers.

ABS Transcription Services abstranscription.com
- $2.50 per recorded minute base rate. More complicated transcriptions (poor quality recordings, multiple voices, accents) raise the rate.
- Media can be submitted by personally (location in Lakewood), or by mail or email.
- Digital or analog
- Contact for estimate of turnaround time: 303.974.8067, Bernice@abstranscription.com

GMR Transcription gmrtranscription.com
- $10 registration fee
- Upload digital recordings
- Analog submitted by mail (conversion fee for analog)
- Transcription returned in word document, or by mail for $15 s/h
- Standard 2 speaker fee is $1.50 per recorded minute. Same day fee is $3.50 per recorded minute. Discount fee (3-4wk turnaround) $1.25 per minute.

Audiofile Solutions audiofilesolutions.com
- Conversion fee for analog files ($25 per hour or $10 per CD or $15 per DVD)
- Analog files submitted by mail
- Standard fee is $1.80 per recorded minute
- Reformatting and editing service available (with minor editing free)
- Accept most file formats
- Rush turnaround available (standard turnaround is 3 days)
- Reservations: 877.237.3453

How do I find IPEDS data?

Monday, November 21st, 2011

IPEDS is the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System. It is a system of interrelated surveys conducted annually by the U.S. Department’s National Center for Education Statistics (NCES). IPEDS gathers information from every college, university, and technical and vocational institution that participates in the federal student financial aid programs. The Higher Education Act of 1965 requires that institutions that participate in federal student aid programs report data on enrollments, program completions, graduation rates, faculty and staff, finances, institutional prices, and student financial aid. These data are made available to students and parents through the College Navigator college search Web site and to researchers and others through the IPEDS Data Center. If you are looking for detailed statistics for a research project, you will want to use the IPEDS Data Center which has more robust search features.

The IPEDS Data Center allows users to compare individual institutions, rank institutions by certain variables, and download custom data files. For predefined data reports on the University of Denver, you may also wish to view the Profiles (University Fact Book).   Please feel free to contact the Research Center with any questions!

Where should I start research on ideals of beauty throughout history?

Monday, November 14th, 2011

Credo Reference recently added Berg’s six-volume A Cultural History of the Human Body series, which is a good place to start your research.

With chapters written by scholars in the field, typical volumes provide overviews on themes such as birth, death, sexuality, popular beliefs, ideals of beauty, and the self and society.  Each chapter concludes with a bibliography of primary and secondary sources, leading to further readings. 

Interested in tattoos or the use of cosmetics throughout the ages?  What about wigs in the eighteenth century?  Credo allows keyword searches within each volume…

 

 

 

or, using the “Advanced Search” option, search within the series:

And then select the titles in the series:

In addition to this series, Berg, the publisher, also has two other series on the cultural history of animals and of sexuality.

For more in-depth research help, make a consultation appointment in the Research Center where we can help you find primary source material from our wide-ranging digital collections as well as scholarly secondary resources on the topic.

How can I get research help?

Monday, February 28th, 2011

The Research Center answers all levels of research questions – from basic to complex – seven days a week.    Our hours during the quarter are

  • Sunday, Noon – Midnight
  • Monday-Tuesday, 9 am – Midnight
  • Wednesday-Thursday, 9 am – 9 pm
  • Friday, 9 am – 5 pm
  • Saturday, 10 am – 6 pm

There are many ways to reach us

  • In person -  Main Level Penrose Library
  • Phone – 303-871-2905
  • Text -720-515-2150
  • Email
  • Chat/IM

Research consultation appointments offer one-on-one help for students and faculty with subject specialist librarians.  These are available seven days a week as well.  Request an appointment online today!

How do I find a country’s Gini Index?

Thursday, November 4th, 2010

You can use Global Market Information Database to find a country’s Gini Index.  To access this library subscription database take the steps below:

1.  Go to the library homepage at library.du.edu.

2.  Click on the “Databases” link located in the “Find Articles” section of the page.

3.  Select “International Business” in the box under the “Search by Category” section and click on the Submit button.

4. Scroll down and select Global Market Information Database (Enhanced).  Read the “Terms and Conditions” document and click on the Accept button if you agree to the terms.  Once you do this you will have access to the database.

To find the Gini Index for a country take the following steps:

1.  Move the mouse over the SEARCH button and select the text option.

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2.  You will get a search box.  Enter the terms:  gini index and country and click on the GO button.

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3.  The result will be in the Statistics section as illustrated below:

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4.  Click on “Gini Index” to see the data.  You can change the years using the “Change Time Series” button located on the left panel.

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5.  Be sure to Log Off once you have finished using this database.

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Where can I find the “Research Guides”?

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

Penrose provides over 100 Research Guides that cover just about any topic under the Sun. With these guides, you can find “research assistance, subject guides, and useful resources compiled by your friendly librarians. Know what we know – find it in Research Guides!”

The link to the Research Guides is on the main page where it says “Start Your Research”, on the main page for students and many others.

How can I find literature review articles?

Monday, August 16th, 2010

A good literature review provides an overview of research on a topic, discusses and compares the major authors and works within the given parameters of the review, and sometimes identifies gaps in the research.

Penrose Library subscribes to many databases that index literature review articles. Some of these databases let you limit your search specifically to literature reviews. From the Advanced search screen in PsycInfo, for example, select to limit your results by Methodology, and choose Literature Review. PubMed, the freely-available version of Medline, is another database that permits limiting by literature review, specifically systematic reviews. In PubMed you can select the Limits option (to the right of the search box) and then under Type of Article, choose Review, or from the main PubMed page, under PubMed Tools, click on Clinical Queries and limit your results to Systematic Reviews. Web of Science, which includes Science Citation Index, Social Sciences Citation Index, and Arts and Humanities Citation Index, enables you to refine your search by Document Type. After you have conducted your initial search, on the left menu select Document Type, Review, and click the Refine button. If you don’t see Review displayed in your initial results, try clicking on the “more options/values” link to display all document types available.

Some databases will indicate in the subject terms that the article is a literature review. SocIndex with Full Text, for example, uses “Literature Reviews” as a subject heading. In this database, you can type your topic keywords in the search box, and then add “Literature Reviews” to the next line and limit it to the SU Subject Terms field.

What do you do, however, when a database doesn’t have the option to limit to literature reviews?  Often a literature review will include these terms in the title or the abstract of the review, such as the article, “Sexual Assault in the U.S. Military: A Review of the Literature and Recommendations for the Future.” Try searching with the phrase, literature review* or words literature and review* and limit your terms to the title or abstract field, or leave your terms set to the default keyword search. This strategy can be employed in our subscription databases and also in Google Scholar. Although this strategy isn’t perfect, since it will sometimes pick up articles that include a brief literature review (usually mentioned in the abstract) rather than being a full review article, you will be able to find some literature reviews on your topic. Keep in mind that literature reviews address many areas of research. If you are looking for a literature review on a very narrow topic and are unsuccessful, try broadening the scope of your subject keywords. If the database has a thesaurus, use this tool to help you identify narrower, broader, and related subject terms.

An excellent and reliable source for literature reviews is Annual Reviews. Penrose Library subscribes to many of the annual reviews in the biomedical, life, physical, and social sciences, including anthropology, biochemistry, clinical psychology, economics, genetics, microbiology, neuroscience, physical chemistry, political science, psychology, and sociology, among many others. Each annual review volume publishes review articles on selected topics. Some volumes are organized by thematic categories, such as the Annual Review of Sociology, which provides review articles within Theory and Methods, Social Processes, Institutions and Culture, Formal Organizations, Political and Economic Sociology, Differentiation and Stratification, Individual and Society, and Policy categories. Annual Reviews can be searched by keyword in individual issues, journals, or across the entire journal set. Full-text access to Annual Review journals is available from the Annual Reviews website and several of our databases (search by journal title in the catalog and link to the website or database from the record).