THINK first, SEARCH later.
- What kind of resource are you searching for? (Book? Video? Website? Academic article?)
- This tells you WHERE to search: Galileo, GIL, or in a web browser!
- Are there other important things you need to consider?
- Something written by a specialist? Go for Peer Reviewed!
- Something written during a specifc time? Check out the date range!
- What information are you searching for?
- This is where keywords come in.
Make a list. Check it twice! (Don’t know anything about keywords? Watch the :Keywords: A Quick Guide" video on this page!)
Always remember: KEYWORDS are critical!
Here's an example.
My topic is "Text messaging is harmful to teen literacy."
My keywords in this topic are "text messaging" and "harmful", "teen", and maybe "literacy". (We will discuss that last one in a minute!)
My "related words" lists might look like this:
- Keyword: "text messaging". Related words: "texting", "chatting", "messaging"
- Keyword: "harmful". Related words: "damaging", "unhealthy", "negative"
- Keyword: "teen". Related words: "teenager", "young adult", "adolescent", "youth"
- Keyword: "literacy", Related words: "reading", "writing", "proficiency", "ability"
Now I can mix and match - pick two or three words from different lists and use those as my initial search.
Sometimes you have tricky words like literacy. There's no one word that means the same thing, but you can make PHRASES out of other words, like combining "reading" and "proficiency" to make a key phrase: "reading proficiency".