Use the tabs on the left to navigate through the pages of this guide. If you need help, check out some tutorials or send me a question.
Omni is the new academic search tool that locates your research material quickly and easily. Find Omni at the top of all our library webpages, or use the links below.
Here are some online resources to help you with your APA formatting.
Also, ProQuest databases and Scholars Portal offer the option to click on "Cite" for records you find to get an APA formatted citation you can paste into your References list.
This 91/2-minute video walks you through the settings in Word.
Watch this video on YouTube. There's a template there you can download.
Library resources are carefully reviewed and chosen by librarians for things like reliability, relevance, and value.
Use the library to:
(Above content adapted from Washtenaw Community College)
Information found on Google does not go through a consistent review process. Anyone can publish to the web, which makes it hard to determine credibility, relevance and value. You can also be asked to pay for information (like newspaper, magazine, and journal articles) you find using Google. Read more about publishing and Google here.
Use Google or another search engine:
(Above content adapted from Washtenaw Community College)
There's no right or wrong answer to this question. Google is an excellent search engine and the web is full of useful information. What's important is your ability to distinguish appropriate sources from inappropriate sources, since the library isn't doing any sorting for you when you're on the web.
It's also important that you know how and when to put Google aside and use the scholarly indexes that our library pays hundreds of thousands of dollars for each year. This is where the majority of the best research material can be found, and if you graduate from University without knowing how to use them, you've done yourself a true injustice that will probably cost you down the road.
Google Scholar Google created Google Scholar to locate scholarly information on the web. To do this, they receive permission from some scholarly publishers to allow their crawlers into databases, to gather information. The crawlers report back on what they've found and provide citation information. Google doesn't tell you which publishers it searches or what is left out, so you don't know where you're searching.
As a Google Scholar user, you can search the site, read the citations and click on the links to articles.
We've arranged to have Trent University added as an institution on the Google Scholar site, so that you can access many articles online through their search engine, whether you are on campus or not.
To activate it:
Next, set your library affiliation:
The screen looks like this:
If you save these settings, they should be there the next time you go to the site, but if not, just do the same again.
Now, when you search, your results will include links to Trent resources.
If you're off-campus, you'll be asked to login to identify yourself as a valid Trent user. When you search Google Scholar with the Library Links enabled, you can access any article our library has subscribed to. You will not, however, get free access to articles that our library does not already receive online. Use Interlibrary Loan to request these.