The Professional Collection is a
custom selection of more than 300 full-text journals
for educators that is updated daily. The
Professional Collection offers balanced coverage
for any professional educator:
- Arts and Humanities
- Child and Adolescent Psychology and
Development
- Drug and Alcohol Abuse
- Health/Nutrition/Fitness
- Learning Disabilities
- Literature
- School Law
- Science and Technology
- Social Sciences
- Sports/Athletic Training
(Please note that the Professional
Collection may be searched
simultaneously with Academic OneFile by
using
Thomson Gale PowerSearch).
You may access the Professional Collection from anywhere with a valid APSU ID.
How To Search the Professional Collection
SEARCH TYPES: There are 4 search types:
basic, subject guide, publication, and advanced.
-
In an advanced search, there are 3 search
boxes (you can add more rows) where you enter terms that relate to
your research topic.
There are pull-down menus where you select the
‘index’ to search. The default is Keyword, but there are many to
choose from, including author, subject, document title, person, word
count, etc.
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In a basic search, there is a single box
where you can enter terms that relate to your research topic. Search
for terms as keywords (in article titles, subjects, abstracts), as
subjects, or as full text (anywhere in article). Example: drunk
driving.
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In a subject guide search, the term(s) you
enter in the search box are mapped against an online thesaurus and
relevant matches are displayed. If you type the words DUI or DWI or
drunk driving in a subject guide search, you will see that the
preferred term is driving while intoxicated. Often you will
see subdivisions and related subjects to browse through.
Subdivisions target more specific aspects of a
subject; e.g., case studies, forecasts and trends, prevention,
public opinion, research, social policy, statistics. Related
subjects are classified into broader or narrower terms.
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In a publication search, you look for
articles from a known publication; e.g., Time or Newsweek. You see
coverage dates and a listing of available issues to browse. You can
also limit a search by publication title(s).
Wildcards: An asterisk (*) stands for any number of
characters, including none, and is especially useful when you want to
find all words that share the same root. A single question mark ?stands
for exactly one character (wom?n to match women or woman) while multiple
question marks stand for an equivalent number of characters. An
exclamation point (!) stands for one or no characters and is especially
useful when you want to match the singular and plural of a word but not
other forms or, when used inside a word, to match certain variant
spellings. For example, colo!r matches both color (American) and
colour (British).
SEARCH RESULTS: Results are organized into tab groups –
content areas that contain similar types of documents.
There are 4 tabs: Magazines & Journals, Reference, News (from
newspapers and newswires), and Multimedia. Not every tab may contain
items.
VIEW, MARK, PROCESS RESULTS: Your search
results display in reverse publication date order, although they can
be sorted by relevance instead.
The basic bibliographic information, full text
indicator (full-text, full-text with graphics , abstract, citation)
and document type (article, brief article, book review, author
abstract, case note, column, cover story, editorial, interview,
obituary) are listed.. Records display in MLA format. You can mark those articles you want to retain and then
print, e-mail, download
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