Lecture 1

Joshua Kragh Bruhn
CBS Library
[email protected]
Workshop on Information Retrieval
and Reference Management
Master´s Thesis Seminar Series 2014
Partitio
• Lecture 1: Information retrieval
• Lecture 2: Source quality & (anti-)plagiarism
• Lecture 3: Introduction to RefWorks
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Partitio
Lecture 1: Information Retrieval
Getting started
Books
Scholarly journals
Newspapers
Market data
Country information
Company Information
Miscellaneous
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Partitio
Lecture 2: Source Quality & (Anti-)Plagiarism
 Verification of online resources
 Principles of referencing
 Miscellaneous resources
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Partitio
Lecture 3: Introduction to RefWorks
 Organisation
 Import
 In-text citations and bibliographies
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Lecture 1: Information Retrieval
Getting started - peers
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Lecture 1: Information Retrieval
Getting started – reference works
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Lecture 1: Information Retrieval
Getting started – Literature reviews
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Lecture 1: Information Retrieval
Getting started – Key readings
(Key readings)
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Lecture 1: Information Retrieval
Books
CBS Library catalogue
Danish cross-library catalogue
Global catalogue
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Lecture 1: Information Retrieval
Scholarly articles - Tapping into database logics
Business Source
Complete: Use
subject terms
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Lecture 1: Information Retrieval
Scholarly articles – Using alerts
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Lecture 1: Information Retrieval
Scholarly articles – Citation trawling
Use these to find more of
the same and assess
quality.
Scopus and Web of
Science operate on
articles only
Google Scholar operates
on all types of academic
output
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Lecture 1: Information Retrieval
Scholarly articles – Author stalking
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Lecture 1: Information Retrieval
News Media
International news media
(click Search Builder and use
the indexes
International news media
Danish news media
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Lecture 1: Information Retrieval
Markets statistics and reports
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Lecture 1: Information Retrieval
Countries
For country PESTL analyses,
enter country name and scroll to
the bottom of the page
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Lecture 1: Information Retrieval
Companies
Search specific company or segments
of companies
Annual reports for listed companies
available under Filings
Danish companies only, incl. annual
reports
Click the Company tab
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Lecture 1: Information Retrieval
Marketing, Advertising, and Media
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Lecture 1: Information Retrieval
Methodology
Click Methodologies -> Methods map to
browse content
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Lecture 2: Source quality & (anti-)plagiarism
Verification of online resources
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Lecture 2: Source quality & (anti-)plagiarism
Principles of ethical referencing
Always mention your source
If you make use of other people´s thoughts and ideas it is crucial that you
always acknowledge this through a reference.
If you leave out references to the sources used this can be viewed as
plagiarism
There are a number of ways to mention a source:
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Lecture 2: Source quality & (anti-)plagiarism
Principles of ethical referencing
Always mention your source contd.
Direct quote:
”Culture is a web of flows, multiplying, converging and crossing”
(Fornäs, 1995, p. 1)
Paraphrase:
Culture is a complex and dynamic concept (Fornäs, 1995, p. 1)
Referential:
According to Johan Fornäs culture is not a static but a very
dynamic reality (1995, p. 1)
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Lecture 2: Source quality & (anti-)plagiarism
Principles of ethical referencing
Mention all sources, no matter the type
Not only printed sources with an obvious originator need referencing.
Whether you find inspiration for your assignment in a traditional
monograph, on a company website, in conversations with informants etc.
these sources always need mentioning
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Lecture 2: Source quality & (anti-)plagiarism
Principles of ethical referencing
Be loyal to your sources
Citations always need to be identical to what is actually being cited. It is
not okay to ”retouch” ”bad” wordings or to correct mis-spellings in the
original document.
There are, however, various ways of getting around this, the most
common being:
- [sic]
- Square brackets […]
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Lecture 2: Source quality & (anti-)plagiarism
Principles of ethical referencing
Be loyal to your sources contd.
[sic] following immediately after a word signals that an archaic or incorrect
spelling orginates in the source document.
ex. The harwest [sic] was ruined
If you wish to only quote parts of a sentence you can use […] to indicate
the bits left out.
ex: ”[…] a voice […] told him that a ship was ready to carry him to freedom” (Lydon 1998).
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Lecture 2: Source quality & (anti-)plagiarism
Principles of ethical referencing
List all important data
Book:
Canary, Heather E., and Robert D. McPhee. 2011. Communication and
organizational knowledge. Contemporary issues for theory and practice.
New York: Routledge
Article:
Banerjee, Subhabrata Bobby. 2010. Governing the global corporation: A
critical perspective. Business Ethics Quarterly 20 (2) (Apr): 265-74.
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Lecture 2: Source quality & (anti-)plagiarism
Principles of ethical referencing
Ensure alignment between in-text references and
bibliography
Any in-text citation must be accompanied by an entry in the bibliography.
However, only one entry is needed per source, no matter how many times
it is mentioned.
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Lecture 2: Source quality & (anti-)plagiarism
Resources & tools
Familiarise yourself with the principles
of referencing
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Lecture 3: Introduction to RefWorks
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Miscellaneous services
 Book-a-librarian
 Interlibrary loans (ILL)
 When writing your thesis
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Contact
CHAT MED CBS BIBLIOTEK // Mon - Fri 9-16
T: 3815 3815 // Mon - Fri 9-16
E: [email protected]
P: Solbjerg Plads 3
Mon – Thu 9-18
Fri 9-16
Sat - Sun 10-16
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