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Family and Consumer Sciences

Make an Appointment with a Librarian

If you would like to speak with a librarian about your research at any point, there are several ways to contact us! You can chat with us from the homepage, or "Start Here" page of this guide. You can also make an appointment from the homepage or email me directly at njdwigans@meredith.edu for us to set up a time to talk! We can help you find sources, discuss keywords, or go over citations, etc. 

Keywords

1) Focus on nouns as your keywords, unless there is a specific verb or adjective that is is central to your topic.

2) Leave out generic words like "effect", "cause", "impact", and "change", since they appear in millions of article titles and won't add anything distinctive to your search.

3) If your concept is best represented by a multi-word phrase (such as "birth control" or "social media"), put the phrase in quotation marks in your search.  This will ensure that the library search tool will only find sources that use those words as a phrase.

4) The type of source you want may dictate the words you search.  For example, if you want magazine articles or popular books about prison sentences for illegal drug users, you might use words like "prison" or "jail"; if you want scholarly journal articles by experts in the field of criminology, you might use "incarceration" instead.

5) Add another concept to your search if you're finding too many results.  This may involve one or more extra keywords that the sources would have to match, meaning that fewer sources will remain in your results.  Conversely, remove a concept if you're not finding enough.

Find Journal Articles

Evaluating Sources

When you’re doing research, it’s important to make sure that the sources you’re finding are reliable and of high quality, as well as appropriate for the context. But what does this mean? How are you supposed to do this?

Watch the video below from the North Carolina State University Libraries to get a better idea of what source evaluation is and why it matters.