Library Survival Skills for
New College Students
Your
high school seniors are our college freshmen. These are the skills they need to
succeed:
1.
Students need practice refining research questions.
This
involves coming up with an idea and starting with background reading in
reference materials to shape or change their thesis.
Empire State College SUNY—Developing a
Research Question or
Purdue Online Writing Lab—Developing a
Thesis Statement
2.
Students need familiarity with a variety of types of sources their
professors will require them to use: reference works, books, periodicals, web
sites, etc. They should know how to locate these sources,
retrieve and use information from all of these types of sources.
UCLA College Library—Selecting the
Right Source
or
UC Irvine Libraries—The Information
Process
3.
College students need to know about the different kinds of periodicals,
journals, and magazines. Professors require even lower-division students to
read and comment on peer reviewed articles. Students should know the meaning of
peer-reviewed, journal, serial, periodical, scholarly, etc. University of Wisconsin at
Milwaukee—College Level Sources or
Castleton State College—Periodical
Articles
4.
College students need to know
how to effectively access and utilize databases. This includes citing
databases and understanding the various types of media available on databases.
Boston University—Surfing or Researching? (Use “next” link in upper
right-hand corner to move from slide to slide.)
5.
College students need to know how to create search statements for online
sources.
They need to understand the difference between subject
heading and keywords searching in a library catalog or database. They should be
able to do advanced searching in a free search engines (Google).
Students should know Boolean search terms (and, or, not) and how they work, as
well as how to use limiters.
Transitioning to College—Talking to
Databases or
Southern Utah University
Library—Database Searching Tips
6.
It’s essential for students to be comfortable using more than Google for research.
Students should understand what the differences are between the visible and the
invisible web. Many professors will NOT let students use only non-subscription
Internet sources.
LaGuardia Community College—Beyond
Google: The Invisible Web
10.
Students simply must
know enough about plagiarism to avoid committing it. Many colleges have very stiff
penalties for all forms of academic dishonesty. Students should understand
the nuances of summarizing, paraphrasing, quoting, etc. and that ALL require
citations.
Vaughn Memorial Library Acadia University—You Quote It,
You Note It! or
Western Oregon University—Why Cite Sources?
12.
There's more in a
college library than books.
College libraries often have materials on reserve for specific classes, like
textbooks and study guides. Many college libraries lend equipment, like
graphing calculators. Nearly all college libraries offer online access to
articles from magazines, journals, and newspapers; most also offer some books
online.
Bakersfield College Library Home Page
13.
College libraries often offer
online tutorials and/or orientation classes.
Even though students may feel
overwhelmed, they should take the time to utilize these resources to learn more
about the campus library.
Bakersfield College Library Research Workshops or
Humboldt State University Library—Research Roadmap
14.
College libraries employ
Reference Librarians!
Reference librarians are there to help students to find the best possible
resources and save time. Nobody expects students to know where everything is in
the library, so they should feel comfortable asking questions—by phone, email,
or in person.
Washington Post--Got a Research Paper to Write? Friend a
Librarian
An additional practical site:
UCLA Libraries Assignment Calculator
These tips are adapted from a list compiled by Academic
(i.e. College) Librarians and were retrieved from the Information Literacy
Instruction Discussion List (hosted on the American Library Association server,
sponsored by the Instruction Section of the Association of College and Research
Libraries).
Prepared by Nancy Guidry and
Dawn Dobie, Bakersfield College Library, November 2012