There are lots of places to search for information. Some of them you may be familiar with and others may be new:
Google - Great for finding popular information, harder to find scholarly/academic/peer reviewed information. It works using natural language searching (full sentences and long phrases). If you're not sure if a source is scholarly, you can always ask a librarian.
Google Scholar - Great for finding scholarly information, but does not have a lot of search tools. You must connect to UD libraries in the settings to get articles for free. Works using natural language searching (full sentences and long phrases).
Library Databases (See links below) - Great for finding scholarly information that is specialized to your discipline. You'll need to learn keyword searching to use these databases effectively.
AI tools - If you're going to use an AI tool for research, I recommend Perplexity because it provides the original source for the information that it provides. Many of these sources come from Google, so they would usually be considered popular information rather than scholarly. If you're not sure if a source is scholarly, you can always ask a librarian.
Can also be searched as part Social Services Abstracts.
Can also be searched as part Sociological Abstracts.
Can also be searched as part Social Services Abstracts.
Focused on a core of around 500 of the most relevant English language scholarly journals covering aspects of health and social care from a broadly social scientific perspective.
Can also be searched as part Sociological Abstracts.
The database also contains Ethnic NewsWatch: A History, which provides historical coverage of Native American, African American, and Hispanic American periodicals.
Ethnic NewsWatch™ comprehensively covers these ethnic categories:
Contains a significant body of archival material dating back to the mid-1970s. Additional archival material continues to be added.
Provides indexing and abstracts for essential sources including: journals, newsletters, bulletins, books, book chapters, reports, theses, dissertations, and grey literature.
This collection can also be searched on Gale Primary Sources, an integrated platform that combines Gales digital archives into a single cross-searchable interface.
This collection can also be searched on Gale Primary Sources, an integrated platform that combines Gales digital archives into a single cross-searchable interface.
Contains thousdand of law-related journals on a variety of subjects, all dating back to inception with over 90% available through the current issue or volume. Subject related collections are often curated and made available.
Databases:
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials
Cochrane Methodology Register
Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects
Health Technology Assessment Database
NHS Economic Evaluation Database
Vendor Lyrasis. Publisher LexisNexis.
When using Google Scholar, it helps to have the UD Get It link enabled to make finding your articles through the library easier.
1) Go to google scholar and click on Settings
2) Click on Library Links from the left hand navigation column, type in University of Delaware, and check off the box next to Get It.