Planning your search is key to getting the most out of your search results. The following video will help you get started.
Video Length: 2 min 26 sec
Read: How to plan your search [pdf]
The rest of this page will outline the three key steps for planning your search as discussed in this video: identify keywords, consider alternative keywords, and connect your keywords.
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Typing your question into Google or the Library Website is not the best way to search.
Mapping out your search can be a good place to start:
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Can you find the keywords in the two activities below?
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Now you've identified the keywords in your assignment question, try doing the following to help you understand your keywords and find similar or alternative keywords:
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Once you have identified your keywords and found alternative keywords, you need to connect these to put your search together.
Use the following operator words, which most search tools will have, to indicate how you want the tool to search for your keywords:
Remember to use "quotation marks" to keep phrases together.
For example:
"financial theory" AND markets
finance AND (management OR leadership)
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Remember, searching is not a linear process. You may change your search as you discover more information.
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Read: Assignment planning [pdf] |
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Read: Understanding assignments and instruction words [pdf] |
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Read: How to save time searching databases with truncation, wildcards and phrases [pdf] |
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