Skip to Main Content

Aviation

Plan your search

Planning your search approach is important to find relevant results. 

Video length: 2 min 26 sec

Key points from the video

  • Identify the key concepts (main ideas) in your assignment
  • Check other ways key concepts are described in the literature
  • Create a search by connecting concepts using AND and OR
  • Alter your search strategy as you find more keywords

More help

Identify assignment keywords

Typing your assignment question into Google or the Library Collection is not the most effective way to search.

Mapping out your search can be a good strategy:

  • Start by identifying key concepts in your question or task. These become your keywords.
  • Note task or instruction words. These tell you what to do with the key concepts (e.g. analyse, compare, discuss) however, you don't have to search for them.

Undertake some initial searching and use course readings, encyclopedias, dictionaries, websites or thesauri to find synonyms or alternative keywords, this is important as not everyone refers to concepts in the same way.

Create a mind map or table to capture potential keywords.

Other search functions you can use

Once you have identified your key concepts and found alternative keywords, connect these to form a search strategy.

Use the following search functions to connect your keywords:

  • OR: Combines similar keywords, e.g. aeroplane OR airplane
  • AND: Combines different keywords, e.g. aeroplane AND pilot

Use the following functions to build your search:

  • "quotation marks": Used to search for phrases, e.g. "flight crew"
  • (brackets): Groups synonyms or similar keywords together, e.g. (aeronautics OR aviation)
  • *asterisks: Searches variant spellings of keywords, e.g. manag* searches manage, management, managers

Example searches

Library Collection basic search:

Basic search (pilot OR crew) AND fatigue AND manag*

Library Collection advanced search allows you to place each different concept in a new search field:

Advanced search line 1 pilot OR crew line 2 AND fatigue line 3 AND manag*

Refine your results by resource type, publication date, peer-reviewed and much more.

More help

Test your knowledge

Referencing and academic integrity

At University, you must acknowledge when you use other people's ideas as part of your assignments. This means referencing using your program area's preferred citation style. For assistance with referencing and academic integrity refer to the University guides below.

Copyright at University

Copyright works, protected by Copyright, are material form and have a human author. Copyright protects the expression of the idea, not the idea itself. It protects published and unpublished material, including material available in electronic form.

Learn more

Academic skills

If you need further assistance, there are a number of resources created by the Student Engagement Unit to help you with your studies.