Here are our reference hours.
Finding Articles Using Library Databases
If you know the journal title:
Discovery Search: Journal Articles
Start by watching the short video below to learn about finding articles using the library Discovery search.
Click the links below to get into one of our databases:
Recommended Databases - Education and Leadership
The U.S. Department of Education sponsors this database to provide extensive access to education-related literature. ERIC provides coverage of journal articles, conferences, meetings, government documents, theses, dissertations, reports, audiovisual media, bibliographies, directories, books, and monographs.
Provides access to academic journals, reports, and many premier reference sources in the field of education.
Limiting to Peer-Reviewed
Most of our databases have the option to limit search results to a peer-reviewed journal. See the examples below from ProQuest, Gale's Academic OneFile, and EBSCO Business Source Ultimate to show you where to limit a search to peer-reviewed articles.
Ex. from the ALL EBSCO Databases - in the Advanced Search screen you can limit to
Gale databases (ex. Academic OneFile) - use the Advanced Search option to limit to
EBSCO databases (ex from Business Source Ultimate)
What if an article does not have full text?
1. Use the E-Journals by Title search
2. Search Google Scholar by putting the article title within quotation marks. Many times 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
Making an ILL Request
Use ILL if you need an article or book not found in Trevecca's library collection. This is a free service to all students. Our ILL guide, linked below, will give you the details on how to make an interlibrary loan request and answer many questions you may have. If you have additional questions or need assistance, please call the ILL office (615-248-1548) or email us (ill@trevecca.edu)
EBSCOhost is the platform for the library's primary multidisciplinary database, Academic Search Ultimate. Learn more about effective ways to search and find results in this premiere database.
For more comprehensive searching use the All EBSCO Database link which searches across our EBSCO collections.
Learn how to apply citation tools to an article. Citation style options include APA, Chicago, and MLA.
Full-text availability is shown under the abstract for the record in the result list. Options are HTML or PDF formats.
Academic Search Ultimate is one of many EBSCO databases that are part of the library collection. The search interface is the same for each database but limit and search options vary, e.g., subject terms vary in the different databases. The information below is specific to Academic Search Ultimate (ASU).
To search ASU: To begin by entering search terms in the boxes provided. Best practices include:
Result List: Setting Limits and Refining Search Options
The result list is displayed in a sort default of Relevance. You can change the sort option by clicking the down arrow at the top right. Sort by most pub date newest or oldest, alphabetically by source or author, and relevance.
Defaults
Apply Equivalent Subjects is a default designed to broaden your search results using a mapped vocabulary pulled from multiple high-quality vocabularies used for indexing content. e.g. A search for 'workplace injury' will also find "workplace injuries." This can be turned off by clicking the x near the term.
Limits
Limiter examples include:
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