The blog for Tavistock & Portman NHS Foundation Trust's Library.
Specialised in psychoanalysis, psychotherapy, family therapy, forensic psychotherapy, educational psychology, clinical psychology, social work...
Wednesday, 22 June 2016
Wednesday, 15 June 2016
CHANGES TO LIBRARY OPENING TIMES
From today, the Library will be closing at 6pm until Friday 8 July.
From Monday 11 July to Friday 29 July our opening times will be the usual academic vacation hours of 10am-5pm Monday to Friday.
From Monday 11 July to Friday 29 July our opening times will be the usual academic vacation hours of 10am-5pm Monday to Friday.
Summer Closure - 1-26 August
We will also be closing in August for four weeks for our annual summer project work.
Help will be available by phone and email during office hours throughout
this period. You will also be able to collect
reservations/interlibrary loans etc. as long as you let us know in
advance when you are coming. Returned items can be dropped into the red book return bin outside the library on the right hand side.
24/7 access to our electronic resources is unaffected by the closure.
Please check our collections carefully via Discovery and if the item you need is not available electronically you can make an appointment with the library to come in to consult materials held on-site.
Best wishes,
The Library
Monday, 13 June 2016
Describing your literature search
Sometimes, research assignments require that you describe your literature search.
How should you go about it?
Here is a list of features that you might want to include when describing how you found the literature required by your assignment.
- When the search was performed
This might explain why your paper doesn't mention this brand new study that was just published...
- Databases used
- Search terms
- Your search equation
Don't forget to add anything else about your search method that would be useful to reproduce your search (i.e.: "search terms were used for all fields", "in addition, bibliographies of recent literature reviews were cross-referenced", "to supplement the search, we consulted expert opinions for recommendations", etc.).
If you used a complex series of equations, producing a screengrab of your search history might be a good idea. Here is how:
- First, make sure that you delete anything not relevant to your final search from the search history, by clicking the check-box next to each undesirable search and then clicking "delete searches".
- Then, press the button "PrtScn" (or equivalent) on your keyboard.
- Paste the image in your Word document.
- Click on the image. A new menu, "Format" appear. Click on it. Then click the "Crop" button.
- Move the black cursors around the image until only your search history is visible. Press enter when you're satisfied.
- And you're done!
- Selection or exclusion criteria
Those could includes:
- Limiters you used to refine your pool of results (a limitation by date, to only articles for which the full-text was available, to a specific category of subject...);
- Or simply how you selected the articles (i.e.: "we excluded papers that focused on only one dimension of sustainability or did not relate to facility location at all").
- Number of documents found
But this is by no means mandatory.
Do note that you definitely don't have to use all of those features in order to describe your literature search.
Use your judgement for what makes sense in your particular context, and ask your tutor if you're in doubt.
One last piece of advice: do yourself a favour... and write all of this information about your search while doing your search!
You might not have to use it all, but it's always best to have too much information rather than not enough...
Good luck!
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Tuesday, 7 June 2016
URGENT MESSAGE FOR TAVISTOCK & PORTMAN STUDENTS
There's still time to complete the Tavistock & Portman student survey - your feedback is important!
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