This assignment help will assist you in finding information for your essays.
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Planning your search helps you find information more efficiently.
Start by:
A table or mindmap can be a useful strategy for doing this.
For example, if your topic is 'Analyse three examples of the lasting impact of Ancient Greek society and culture on the evolution of human civilisation', you could do:
Main concepts |
Concept 1 |
Concept 2 |
Concept 3 |
Synonyms (similar concepts) |
influence effect |
Greece Hellenic Hellenistic |
civilization culture custom society |
This search can serve as a starting point in your research and help you find relevant resources. However, you may notice that you are finding a large volume of irrelevant results.
If this is the case, including a phrase such as ‘influence of Greek’ (which you may have come across in relevant results within your first search), will yield fewer results, but they will likely be more relevant. You can include the area of civilisation that has been influenced by Ancient Greek culture and society as your second concept, for example:
Main concepts |
Concept 1 |
Concept 2 |
Synonyms (similar concepts) |
"influence of Greece" "influence of Hellenic" |
painting sculpture |
Tip: As you search, you may come across more concepts or synonyms you can incorporate. Don't be afraid to change or modify your search as you go.
Watch or read the below for more information on how to put together a search using operators:
More help
Watch Plan your search (video length: 2 min 26 sec)
Read: How to plan your search (PDF - 276KB)
View the Writing your assignment page for more info on interpreting your topic and planning your search
Boolean operators (connectors) are what you use to connect your search concepts together to form different search strategies.
The below table summarises how they work:
Boolean operator | What it does | Example |
AND | Finds less results when concepts are combined with AND | Impact AND Greek |
OR |
|
Greek OR Greece OR Hellenic OR Hellenistic |
Search strategy: (Historical OR History) AND (Cloth OR Jeans OR shoes) AND (race OR class) |
Knowing where to search is just as important as knowing how to search. The following video will help you to understand why and when to use different search tools.
Video Length: 2 min 14 sec
Once you've built a search strategy, you can apply it in search tools. Watch Choosing where to search - video (2 min 31 sec) for example searches below.
The Library Collection can be a useful starting point in locating information.
Put your search in the basic search box, group your alternative keywords inside brackets e.g. impact AND Greek AND civilisation
Alternatively, use the advanced search to split your concepts on to different rows e.g.
impact OR influence OR effect
AND
Greek OR Greece OR Hellenic OR Hellenistic
AND
civilisation OR civilization OR culture OR custom OR society
Use Refine my results on the left hand side to narrow your results. Here are some examples:
Databases are searching tools for finding articles, papers, reports and more. Some databases are subject-specific, whilst others may cover multiple subject areas. See the In Focus: History page for a summary of history databases and other relevant history resources.
Google Scholar searches within academic or scholarly sites, rather than the whole internet. Access via the Library for full text at UniSA links to resources held in the collection.
Demo Google Scholar search:
(“influence of Greek” OR “influence of Greece” OR “influence of Hellenic” OR “influence of Hellenistic” OR “Greek influence” OR “Hellenic influence” OR “Hellenistic influence”)
AND
(art OR painting OR sculpture)
Want to Know More?
Watch Why use Google Scholar (2 min 13)
Watch Advanced Google Scholar search (1 min 22)
When you've found a really useful article or book chapter, look at the reference list and who has cited (referenced) it to find further relevant literature.
Key databases and search tools which track citations include: Scopus, Web of Science, Google Scholar and the Library Collection.
In the Library Collection, look for or .
For more information, watch Citation Tracking - video (1 min 50 sec)
Peer reviewed (refereed) journals are of a high quality and must go through an evaluation process with experts in the field before being published. The terms scholarly and academic are sometimes used instead.
You can also use the "Refine my Search" menu to show only Peer Reviewed articles in your search results.
Want to Know More?
View Find Scholarly Sources - (PDF - 305 KB)
Watch Scholarly sources Explained - video - (2 min 22 sec)
This short video (video length: 2 min 27 sec) goes through the process of writing an essay.
The Student Engagement Unit has created a suite of resources called Study Help that can help you understand different assignment types.
Take a look at:
Studiosity offers assistance with academic writing, referencing, maths, business studies and more. Use the online chat or submit work for feedback.
You must appropriately cite (‘acknowledge’) all references used in your assignment to avoid plagiarism.