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Doctor Business Administration, DBA

Peer-reviewed journal access through library databases.

Tips to Limit to US Based Content

Tips to Limit Database Results to U.S.-Based Content

Here are helpful tips on how to limit library database results to domestic or United States-published sources. You will see different ways to refine your search, such as using quotes to search for phrases, limiting by language, and making an assessment based on English language content. Also demonstrates how to limit resources in specific databases, like EBSCO, and how to use geographical options to search for United States-based content. While these methods are not foolproof, they can help narrow down your search and find resources from a USA perspective.

0:00 Introduction
0:32 Discovery Search
2:22 Database Search
4:55 Google Scholar Search

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Articles are found in the library databases. Search by subject, browse journal titles, or search by author within the databases.

The A-Z Databases webpage is the comprehensive listing of over 150 databases subscribed to by Waggoner Library

Start by viewing the videos below to learn how to guide your research effectively.

Discovery Search

Discovery is a good starting place, BUT you must use library databases to ensure you search and find all the research you need.

The first video shows you how to use Discovery Search to find journal articles effectively. The second video shows how to find topics from specific journal titles

Primary DBA databases include:

Multidisciplinary Databases - broader resources that cover multiple topics.

Business Source Ultimate (BSU) 

 

This database will be one of your best resources for this program. Learn how to find company information, scholarly journal articles, book excerpts, trade magazines, and more about this essential resource. 

One of the largest databases available through Waggoner library, this resource contains sources of information including legal, company & industry information, news sources, and public records.

Nexis Uni™ content includes:

  • Print and online journals
  • Television and radio broadcasts, newswires, and blogs
  • Extensive legal sources for federal and state cases and statutes
  • Includes U.S. Supreme Court decisions since 1790
  • Information on 80 million U.S. and international companies and more than 75 million executives
  • U.S.& State Legislative Codes

Looking for a quality Infographic, charts, or other statistical information for a presentation or research?

Statista.com is one of the first statistic portals in the world to integrate data on over 80.000 topics from over 18.000 sources onto a single professional platform. Categorized into 21 market sectors, Statista.com provides the academic community, companies, and research institutions with direct access to quantitative data on media, business, finance, politics, and a wide variety of other areas of interest or markets.

Below is an infographic example and a link to an example of a chart from Statista. Statistics like these can be added to papers, presentations, and reports. Statista provides accurate citation records to ensure proper credit is given. 

Learn more about Statista from this introductory video

 

Sample chart: Over the course of the past ten years, the proportion of women in senior leadership roles around the world has changed very little. According to Grant Thornton, currently, only 22 percent of all managers are women.

What if an article does not have full text?

1. Use the E-Journals by Title Search

  • Identifies if the library has the journal and provides a database and link to access the full text.

2. Search Google Scholar by putting the article title within quotation marks. A PDF or HTML option for an article can be found at no cost in Google Scholar.

3. Journal Article requests can be made through the Interlibrary Loan link on the library homepage

  • Use it if you cannot find the full text from the library
  • Complete the form and submit it; this service has no cost! 
  • The article reprint will come as a PDF generally within two days.

Also included here are tutorials and information about specific business resources. 

Click the links to navigate to the related page. 

What is Peer Reviewed?

Many writing assignments require students to use "research," "scholarly," "peer-reviewed," or "referred" journals.  These terms are often used interchangeably, although "peer reviewed" is the clearest and most specific way to designate this type of publication. 

Start by viewing this YouTube video Scholarly vs. Popular Periodicalsto see and understand the differences between scholarly journals, trade publications, and general magazines.

Peer-reviewed or Referred journals are many scholars' most important sources of information. These journals do not publish an article unless it is recommended by other scholars/experts. Often this recommendation must be made blindly, without the reviewer knowing who the author is. 

A "research" article will almost always appear in a peer-reviewed journal. These are articles in which the author(s) report the research results they have conducted. They are one of several types of articles that such journals routinely publish.

Most of our databases have the option to limit search results to peer-reviewed journals.  See the examples below from Discovery search, Gale's Academic OneFile, and EBSCO Business Source Ultimate to show you where to limit a search to peer-reviewed articles

Discovery Search for journal articles

 

Gale Databases showing Academic OneFile - this location is the same in all Gale Databases

 

EBSCO Databases showing Business Source Ultimate - this location is the same in all EBSCO Databases

The foundational search methods described below can be applied as you need them to narrow your topic, hone in on specific content, or identify related terms and relationships. They can be applied in the library Discovery search, databases, Google Scholar, or general search engines. 


Keywords

Discovering the right combination of keywords for your research topic takes time. It's a process. You may use one group of words first and then try another group of related words or phrases all in the search process to find the right combination that fits your topic direction. Below you'll see suggestions to maximize keyword searching. 

Use Boolean to focus your search.

Including one of the Boolean terms in your search helps narrow or broaden results. The 'Not' eliminates terms from search results.

Prince George's Community College

Using Punctuation to Change Results

Truncation means adding a symbol to a word that will change your results. Most of the database help pages will list the truncation symbols that can be applied to a search. These are common symbols in use: 

  • The plus sign (+) at the end of the word retrieves the plural and singular forms of the word. 
  • The asterisk (*) at the end of a word will include variant endings of the word in your search results. e.g., swim* would include swim, swims, swimmer, swimming, etc.
  • Placing quotation (") marks around two words or more indicates the words should be searched as a phrase, with the words next to each other, not separate.

Subject Headings 

Review the subject headings found in relevant articles from library databases. Subject headings are official terms that are usually clickable either from the result list or from the full record seen after you click on the source's title. Using these to guide your search helps to focus the results.  

Applying Filters

Filters are found in Discovery search, library databases, and search engines. They are ways you can narrow down or focus your search results on retrieving the most relevant resources. 

   
Date range

You may want to limit the search results you're seeing based on when they were published. For example, evidence-based medicine often involves looking at research from the last five years, while a project taking a historical perspective will want to include work going further back in time.

Language

Consider limiting your search results to just those published in languages that you can read research in. (Note: your professor/advisor may have additional language restrictions, so if you're including research in multiple languages make sure that works for them too.)

Source Type

Literature reviews usually rely rather narrowly on various scholarly or academic sources rather than the full spectrum of sources available to you. Consider limiting your results to Academic or Scholarly articles.

Article Type

Sometimes you just need a systematic review, empirical study, or another form of research. Subject-specific databases will almost always offer a way to narrow down your results by methodology (article type). When the filter isn't available, you can add your method of choice as an additional keyword!

Search Alerts 

Search alerts can save valuable research time and can be set up to provide automatic e-mail notifications whenever new search results become available. You can also retrieve those alerts to perform the search immediately instead of waiting for the alert to run. 

Databases: 

You must create a free account in the database to save your customized search alert that will automatically run based on your set parameters.  


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