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Lakeside High School Media Center Hours 7:30 am - 3:30 pm
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Mrs. Rachel Shankles Library Media Specialist Mrs. Peggy Schaeffer Library Aide
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Library Rules Place all BOOKBAGS by front door. Check out all books before exiting the library. Return reference material to the book cart or counter. You must be quiet, not visit, keep chairs on the floor and avoid rowdy behavior. Return books on due date after two weeks or renew for two more weeks. Turn in all books at semester and pay for lost books before 2 nd term. You may check out 2 books at a time. WE DO NOT CHARGE FINES. Food and drinks (other than water) are prohibited. Water prohibited around computer stations.
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CONSEQUENCES When classes are in the library for research, you will be expected to stay awake and on task. You will receive one warning before being given detention. You will be asked to leave the library for inappropriate behavior and this will result in a two week suspension of library visits.
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Where do you save your work? 1.Always log in as yourself and you can save to the U: drive which puts your ‘my documents’ on the server and it moves with you from class to lab to library for easy access 2.AND move files from home to school using flash drives (jump, thumb drives) 3.The library sells flash drives, disks, etc.
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Other Library Services We check out mini DVD video cameras overnight for school projects and provide the discs You get to print in color or b/w for free Flip video cameras are available for at school use Digital cameras are available for at school use eBooks available from home
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Library Events and Contests
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Define: Literacy
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the ability to use language to read, write, listen, and speak....
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LHS Periodicals/Magazines – for current info Bound back to the 50’s Paper ones all around for pleasure reading Research ones online at EBSCO
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Vertical Files and the VF Indexes Contain magazine articles torn from or copied out of magazines Contain newspaper clippings from old newspapers Contain handouts from guest speakers Index is at checkout counter Can be copied not checked out
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ACCEPTABLE USE POLICY INTERNET USE POLICY 1.Don’t share passwords. 2.Passwords will change every semester. 3.Detention results if pw is forgotten 3 times. 4.Your Parent Internet Viewer (gradebook) password is your birthdate and that won’t change. 5.If you abuse the computers or other eq, you will pay for their repair. 6.Hacking or trying to harm the network results in serious consequences.
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Act 903 The Arkansas Library Privacy Act
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How Can Dewey Help You?
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Boolean Logic How to tell the computer what you want it to do for you It sorts things in and sorts things out of your research You can not use sentences or phrases
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Logical Operators AND REQUIRES THAT THE TERMS BOTH BE PRESENT IN A RECORD OR REQUIRES THAT EITHER THE FIRST OR SECOND TERM BE PRESENT NOT REQUIRES THAT THE FIRST TERM BE PRESENT, BUT ELIMINATES THE SECOND
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Apache AND Helicopter AND ANDAND
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OR ANOREXIABULIMIA OROR
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NOT APACHE INDIAN NOTNOT
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How can Boolean Logic Help you?
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Internet Searching We will use Google ( Advanced Search) as our search engine of choice in the LHS Library. Yahoo and MSN are great for searching of.com sites to buy tickets or find all sorts of items to purchase Yahoo and MSN are directory type searches like process of elimination/broad topic searching in order to narrow topics Ask Jeeves is a search engine that has natural language searching and is intended for youngsters who do not know Boolean Logic
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Internet Searching Google is not the be-all-and-end-all of super duper search engines Google is just a good search engine to use for educational research It is only as good as the knowledge of Boolean logic of the user
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The blue box at the top is very important The top two lines need to be filled out carefully Top line says “Find Results---with all these words” The second line says “Find Results--- with the exact phrase” In 2nd line put your proper noun keyword search phrase that you want found in exact order
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In top line then put the delimiters These would be the subtopics in the student’s outline of their research These would be more specific instead of searching just for anything about a broad subject in the 2 nd line For instance: use The Battle of Bull Run in 2 nd line and death count, location, survivors, or battle details in top line depending on what specific info you need
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Next and very important go down the page half way and find Domain Our school limits use on research to.edu and.gov sites, this is where you place one of those extensions OR the other---not both *refer to Internet Rules of LHS Handout It says you can use both, but it doesn’t work well using both so use one at a time You can figure out if ‘Mafia’ or most history info would be found more readily on.gov sites or if famous people or controversial issues would be found more on.edu sites to try one or other first Then just hit ‘enter’ and all results will be specific and in the correct domain
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Things to Beware about Google You should never have to go to second page of hits/resultsOR use the built-in search button of IE If you do not find what you need on the first page of hits, you need to find other keywords to use in the first line of the advanced search Remember the computer doesn’t think; it is you, the user who has the brain Google is not perfect; they sell the first few hits/results on every search to businesses for a fee--- so those hits are bogus For instance: “You can buy a book on the subject of ‘fast food effects on growth’ at Books-a- Million.” You will be supervised any time you are on the Internet doing research to make sure you are using Goggle
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ON OUR MEDIA CENTER on the WEB The LHS Library has a TeacherWeb site and a Facebook page and a wiki.
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Online Card Catalog on Web Database links are here
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The desktop has a lot of shortcuts and links to use like the Gar County Library and college card catalogs and all our databases links.
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For Magazines Full Text EBSCO a part of Traveler This has hundreds of magazines and newspaper full text articles. You can reach EBSCO on all school computers and from home for free. It is provided by the Ark. State Library to all libraries in our state under a federal grant program.
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You are receiving a handout with the login codes to get to all of our databases from home. Please put this by your home computer. You will need it.
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First Screen: Choose Ebscohost Web
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Go down the list of databases to MAS Ultra- School Edition
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ENTER YOUR KEYWORDS HERE Drugs and sports and baseball HIT ENTER Check Full Text Box
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RESULTS LIST
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Gale Discovering Series on the Web The Gale site is free for schools and for home login and is provided by the Ark. State Library. It contains not magazines but primary source documents on History, Science and Literature. Lots of author biographies and critical interpretations of literary works appear in the literature section. The History section contains timelines, maps, flags, and other information. You use keyword Boolean searching to reach the information you need.
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Put keywords here with “and” prohibition
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Results list
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MLA CITATION
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HOW TO DO A WORKS CITED PAGE MLA Style LIST OF BOOKS AND ARTICLES YOU USED TO WRITE A RESEARCH PAPER ALPHABETICAL BY AUTHOR A BIBLIOGRAPHY
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One or More Authors AUTHOR. TITLE OF BOOK. CITY: PUBLISHER, DATE. PAGES. Gorman, Randy. City Living. New York: Chelsea House, 1994. 30-40. Stevens, Rick, and Susan Gubar. Houses Today. Boston: H.W. Wilson, 1990. 380.
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Book with No Author The Directory of the American Republic. New York: Bowker, 1996. 102-104. Title. City: Publisher, Date. Pages. Book with Editor Bloom, Harold, ed. Literary Essays on American Novelists. New York: H.W. Wilson, 2001. 200-202.
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Paper Magazines & Journals Author. “Title of article.” Title of magazine date: pages. Finney, A. “A Star is Born.” People Weekly 10 Oct. 1995: 10. Garvey, Steve. “After All.” Sports Illustrated 9 Mar. 1995: 10-14.
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ENCYCLOPEDIAS (printed not online) “King, Martin L.” The World Book Encyclopedia., Vol. 3. 1992 ed. 312. “TOPIC.” COMPLETE NAME OF ENCYCLOPEDIA, Vol. #. the year of the edition ed. page.
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PAPER NEWSPAPERS Author if given. “Title of Article.” Title of Newspaper date: Section & Page. McGovern, Clint. “The King is Dead.” USA Today 10 March 1998: B2.
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PAMPHLET from Vertical Files “TITLE.” PUBLISHER. YEAR PUBLISHED. PAMPHLET. “Warning Signs of Cancer.” American Cancer Society. 1994. Pamphlet.
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Citing Websites Author if given. Name of site. Date of Posting or last revision. Name of institution or organization affiliation. Date you saw it. Example: Guide to Literary and Critical Theory. 28 Nov. 2006. Purdue University. 10 Sept. 2007.
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Electronic Databases online: When citing material accessed via an electronic subscription database, you must add the name of the library through which you accessed the content, including the library’s city & state, plus the date of access. Use the URL for the home page of the database, include it. Do not include a URL to the article itself because it is pay-for- view not openly accessible.
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Basic List of Information needed to cite an online database: Author’s name Article title Periodical name Publication date Database name Service name Library name City & State Date of access URL of the database service but not complete URL
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EBSCO Magazine Article First Author Last Name, First Author First Name, and Second Author First Name Second Author Last Name, “Title of the article.” Magazine title Publication day month year: Startpage - end page. Database name. Service. Library, City, State. Day Month Year Accessed. Crainer, Stuart, and Deb Dearlove “Windfall Economics.” Business Week 16 July 2006: 68-72. MAS. ASL-Traveler. LHS Library, Hot Springs, AR. 24 August 2007.
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Infotrac Discovering Series, CLC or Opposing Viewpoints Databases are all Gale products and citation is partially done for you: **GO TO LINK FOR ‘SOURCE CITATION’--- COPY IT--- AND THEN change to author last name first then first name and insert YOUR LIBRARY NAME, CITY, STATE in it WHERE NEEDED AND shorten THE URL BACK TO THE.COM AS IT IS A PAY-FOR-VIEW ONLY SITE AND OTHERS CAN’T GO TO THE EXACT LINK. Fitzpatrick, Kathleen. “Overview of Cells.” Exploring Science. Online ed. Detroit: Gale, 2003. Discovering Collection. Thomson Gale. ASL-Traveler. LHS Library, Hot Springs, AR. 5 September 2005.
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REMEMBER : *Use ink or type. ***Dates are military style. ***Things that are in italics you underline if handwriting or leave in italics if typing; accordingly, if underlined you change to italics ***Book & Magazine titles are underlined or in italics where chapter and article titles are in quotation marks ***We use MLA style but others like Chicago or APA may be required in some colleges
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Works Cited Arbuton, Mike, ed. House on the Edge. New York: Chelsea House Publishers, 2001. Baker, Rena. “How Green Was My Bank Account.” Newsweek 17 July 1989: 108. “Balancing the Budget.” Good Housekeeping, 12 Jan. 1975: 98-99. MAS. ASL-Traveler. LHS Library, Hot Springs, AR. 6 Sept. 2007. Caldwell, Jane. “The Rest of the Story.” New York Times 26 Feb. 1991: 3B. “Don’t Risk It.” National Pharmacy Assoc. 1995. pamphlet. Haliburton, M. and Sue Blue. Houses. 2005. UofArk 6 Sept. 2007.
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Pathfinder Search Assignment due in one week – Make an MLA works cited page 1.Find two books on your assigned subject 2.Find three magazines on your subject – two from EBSCO and one from the Vertical File 3.Find a newspaper on your subject in EBSCO or in the Vertical File 4.Find one Opposing Viewpoints article on your subject 5.Find one Infotrac Discovering Series article on your subject 6.Find two Websites on your subject---one that is.edu and one that is.gov using Google Adv Searching
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Research Strategies 1.Find several books and copy pages 2.Go to EBSCO and print two to five magazine articles 3.Go to one of the databases and print two articles 4.Ask for a Vertical file and make some copies 5.Go to Google Advanced Search and print 2 pages of.edu or.gov info 6.Keep all copies in your binder
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