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Recreation, Tourism, and Nonprofit Leadership
Advanced Search Techniques
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Recreation, Tourism, and Nonprofit Leadership
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KAHHS 6290
RTNL 2130
RTNL 3110
RTNL 3130
RTNL 4553
RTNL 4779
RTNL 6202
RTNL 6410
Special Topics
Advanced Search Techniques
Angie Cox
Angie Cox
she/her/hers
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Email:
angela.cox@uni.edu
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Topics :
Athletic Training
,
Communication Disorders
,
Counseling
,
Family Services
,
Gerontology
,
Health and Medicine
,
Kinesiology
,
Nursing
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Recreation, Tourism, and Nonprofit Leadership
Advanced Search Techniques
Technique to Broaden Your Search
Use Asterisk (*)
Automatically searches and give you results with all variations of that root word (anything before the asterisk)
Example: treat* gives you results with: treat, treated, treating, treatments, etc.
Techniques to Narrow Your Search
Use NOT
Using it means a keyword or phrase won't show up in your results.
Example: cancer NOT colon
Limiting to Part of Article
Using database limiters to indicate where your keyword or phrase will show up.
Limit to:
All fields (Broadest search)
Abstract
Title (Most narrow search
Google Scholar
What is Google Scholar good for?
It sometimes has articles that our library databases don't have.
Quickly finding an article when you know the article title
Citations (auto-generated)
Finding more related articles when you have a known 'good' one you want to use
Search Techniques (Only work in Google products, not library databases)
Quotation Marks
Use around short phrases to keep the phrase together as a search term
Example: "mental health"
Use around a single word to ensure that word shows up in results
Example: "teenager"
If you don't use quotation marks around a single word, that word may or may not show up in your results.
You can use an unlimited amount of quotation marks however the more keywords you use in a search, the more you are narrowing your results.
Minus Sign (-)
Use to ensure a word doesn't show up
Example: "cancer" -colon
You can use an unlimited amount of minus signs however the more you use in a search, the more you are narrowing your results.
intitle:
Use to ensure a word or phrase shows up in the title of the article
To use you must use lower case and there shouldn't be a gap between intitle: and the keyword(s) you are using
Example: intitle:teenager intitle:"mental health"
You can use an unlimited amount of intitle: however the more you use in a search, the more you are narrowing your results.
Google Scholar
This link opens in a new window
Broad search for scholarly articles, legal cases and patent applications.
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