Stewart Library - Weber State University


Research Guide: SOC 1020-Social Problems

Objective: Finding a Scholarly Journal Article

I. Select your search terms

  • State your research topic:
    the effects of drug use on adolescents
  • Identify the separate concepts that make up your topic:
    drug use; adolescents
  • Make a list of search terms for each concept.  Be sure to include synonyms, related terms, and terms that may be broader or narrower:
    drug use: drug abuse, illegal drugs, addiction, marijuana, cocaine
    adolescents: teens, teenagers, youths, high school students
  • Use The Contempory Thesaurus of Search Terms and Synonyms to identify synonyms and related terms - ask at Reference Desk

II. Devise your search strategy

Based on your list(s) of search terms, devise your search strategy:

  • use quotation marks to group two or more words into phrases:
    "drug use", "drug abuse", "illegal drugs"
  • use boolean operator OR; this tells the computer to search for all the terms at the same time:
    "drug use" or "drug abuse"; adolescents or teenagers
  • use boolean operator AND; this tells the computer to restrict retrieval to both concepts:
    "drug use" and adolescents
  • use truncation (*) to broaden your search to include variants of a term:
    adolescen*: adolescent, adolescents, adolescence
  • use parentheses to group terms combined using OR :
    ("drug use" or "drug abuse" or "illegal drugs") and (adolescen* or teen* or youth*)

III. Conduct a search

An article database is a searchable database of references to magazine and journal articles. Some article databases also include the full-text of the article.

To find scholarly journal articles in sociology, a great place to start is Academic Search Premier. This article database contains thousands of full-text articles from hundreds of magazines and scholarly journals, including many in sociology, social work, psychology, and related disciplines. To limit your search to scholary journal articles in Academic Search Premier, click on the box next to Scholarly (Peer-Reviewed) Journals. You may also limit your search to articles available in full-text on the computer by clicking on the box next to Full Text.

IV. Locate the article

If the article is available as PDF Full Text in the article database you are using, download, email or print the article.

If the article is not available as PDF Full Text, click on the Linked Full Text or Find Full Text buttons to see if we have it in full-text in another database.

If there are no Linked Full Text or Find Full Text buttons, or if it says that no full-text is available when you follow any of the links, check the library's EJournals list to see if full-text for the journal containing the article is available in another article database. This list will also tell you if we subscribe to the journal in print format.

If the article is only available in print, do a Journal Alphabetical search in our Online Catalog to identify the call number for the print journal. Recent issues of print journals are shelved by call number in the Current Periodicals area on the Middle Level of the library at the south end. Earlier issues are shelved by call number in bound volumes on the Top Level of the library.

If the article is not available either online or in print, use ILLiad (our online Interlibrary Loan system) to request a copy of the article from another library. This usually takes 2 to 4 days.

V. Verify that the article is scholarly

Use the following criteria to determine if the article represents scholarly research:

  • Does it include a Methods section that describes such things as the independent and dependent variables; the population studied; and the methods used?
  • Does it include a Literature Review that discusses previous research on the topic?
  • Does it include a Results section that provides detailed information on the results of the research, including tables, charts, etc.?
  • Does it include a Discussion section that discusses the results of the research?
  • Does it include an extensive Bibliography or list of References Cited?

You can also use the general criteria found on the library's Scholarly vs. Popular Articles guide to determine if the article is indeed scholarly. You should also verify this with your instructor.

Need more help?

 


Updated February 29, 2008 . Please send comments to Wade Kotter
Weber State University, Stewart Library. Copyright © 2008 All Rights Reserved.