Library
Introducing First-Years to Library Research
The Library has assembled this page for faculty members teaching first-year seminars. It is a guide to services and resources helpful for introducing first-years to college-level research.
We hope that you will call on one of our librarian liaisons to assist you in teaching your students information-seeking skills. The library's instruction program is designed to be a collaborative effort between librarians and faculty members. Whether by conducting a general library session for your class, building links and guides into a Blackboard page, working with you to do your own library instruction, or any combination, liaisons welcome the opportunity to facilitate students' mastery of these skills.
As part of our ongoing joint effort, librarians and the faculty Library Committee developed an Information Literacy statement that describes skills and abilities that we believe define an information literate person. First-year students should learn to:
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The following links will help support your efforts to introduce first-years to basic information-seeking skills:
- Librarian Liaisons
- a list arranged by subject
- Getting Started
- starting a research project; searching for books and articles; obtaining materials not owned by the library; citation norms and policies; general library and branch information
- Subject & Course Guides
- guides to research by subject/department plus guides specific to a course
- Indexes & Databases
- a subject list of the library's electronic & print periodical indexes
- Evaluating Internet Sites
- criteria to consider when using Web sites for research
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Writer's Handbooks
- a list of handbooks owned by the library
- EndNote
- bibliographic management software
- Related Campus Support Services:
This page maintained by Library Web Team. Last update: June 2006.