Start your research process by using reference materials. In a library, these are books like dictionaries, encyclopedias, bibliographies, or atlases; they will give you valuable information like key authors and texts to investigate, important theories about your topic, and keywords that you can use in more detailed searches. Don't skip this step unless you already have a really good idea of the broad picture and important players involved!
At NSA, you can use the books in our reference section to help with this preliminary research. If you aren't sure which reference books can help you, ask! If you don't see the kind of reference book you need, try hitting the U of I or WSU reference sections as well.
Some reference-type books are in the Tyndale stacks as well. Try finding the general area for the books on your topic and browsing for them - look for words like "Guide" or "Companion" in the titles.
Once you've tried that, feel free to venture over to Wikipedia. However, try not to rely too much on the information in the articles; they are easily changed or vandalized. Look for the bibliographies and citations at the ends of the articles instead - you may find sources there that you can follow up on yourself.
Once you've found some books, you probably have more keywords and subject headings to use for an article search as well. Articles provide current scholarly input and can provide more tightly-focused information or arguments for your project. However, you want to make sure that you are finding authoritative pieces rather than just a random dude's blog post! Use scholarly databases rather than Google to get the best results.
At NSA, you have access to any of the databases at lili.org, ProQuest's Patrologia Latina database, and several of JSTOR's databases. Most databases work roughly the same way, so you can use many of the same techniques on all of them.
Do your subject heading searches the same way you did in your book hunt, as well as your subject heading and keyword searches. You should have enough specific terms now to get some decent results even before you try the fancy stuff!
Remember to limit your results. Often helpful are format or accessibility limiters, as well as "peer-review only;" that should give you the cream of the crop.
JSTOR has a magnificent (and entertaining) overview of how to conduct advanced searches on a journal database, and if you are having trouble finding what you need you really should read it. It will make you an instant research ninja.
Your goal: to find authoritative, relevant, and scholarly contributions to the topic of inquiry.
There are three steps to this process:
SEARCH - Know how to craft a good search, whether you are searching a library catalog, a journal database, or the internet at large.
FIND - Know how to locate the resources you've discovered in your search. This may be as simple as being familiar with the Dewey Decimal System.
EVALUATE - Know how to tell which books are worthwhile once you've found them, which journals are authoritative, and which websites have good information.
The boxes below and to the left should go into each of these steps in more detail.
Once you have a good grasp of the big picture and some recognized authors, titles, or keywords to search with, start hunting for books! Look for books that will give you deeper insight into your specific questions and have accurate and relevant information.
Keep in mind that you might not have to read the entire work to find something useful; if you are writing a paper on "Hamlet," for example, flip through more general works on Shakespeare's tragedies to see if they have chapters devoted to that play.
Certain books can be invaluable at this stage - handbooks, bibliographies, Oxford guides, and Cambridge companions are, as they say, the bomb dot com.
At NSA, begin your book hunt on the Populi catalog. Populi unfortunately doesn't have many advanced searching options, but there are a few different tricks you can try to get more specific results.
Once you've found some results from your awesome research ninja searches, you still need to evaluate what you've found. Some material is not as helpful, relevant, or scholarly as it looked from the search box! Here are some criteria to help you assess.
The talented library team at Kuyper College is responsible for the structure of the ALEA system. Many thanks to them! Additional thanks to our former head librarian Heather Howell for providing this information!