Skip to Main Content

WRI 110: With Your Own Words: Writing to Connect: Home

This guide supports Dr. Branch's WRI 110 course

Search Tips

Good searching can shorten your research time significantly. Here are some tips from the pros:

  • Use quotation marks around a phrase to inform the search engine to look for exactly the phrase you enter- for example "food desert" or "youth activism".

  • When searching for a keyword with multiple variations (ex. "education", "educators") use the root form of the word and add an asterisk (*). This means using educat* will retrieve items that have all variations-- "education", "educators", etc.

  • Start simple! Begin with 1-2 targeted key words and then make adjustments (more terms, less terms, different terms) depending on your search results. Pay attention to keywords, phrases that are used in highly relevant resources.

  • Use the built-in database filters to focus your results- most interfaces let you limit by publication date, subject, format and more

  • Finally, ZSR Librarians are here to help you find the best sources for your research assignment!

Search Google Scholar

Google Scholar Search

Getting Started with Background Sources

Before getting started with research, it is a good idea to start with some background and context to the issues you are investigating. The sources below will help you get to that information quickly AND they can help you focus your research topic!

General & Subject Databases


 

Instruction & Outreach Librarian

Profile Photo
Meghan Webb
she / her
Contact:
webbmm@wfu.edu

Search the ZSR Catalog for Books or eBooks

News & Popular Sources (Full text through ZSR databases)