Welcome to the library guide for PSY379. This guide includes helpful links for identifying research articles and other sources.
Please do not hesitate to contact me individually. You can use the Appointment Scheduler link under my profile picture to setup a time to meet with me in June. For assistance at other times, please see the Summer Services page on the library website.
Ship Topic Guides are a way to get comprehensive background information about many current topics. Included are many topics about which you are making presentations. For example, guides include: Gangs, Alcohol and Substance Abuse, Teen Pregnancy, Teen Suicide, Domestic Violence, and more.
This database includes a gigantic online library of reference books and handbooks, and includes many sources relevant to your research in this class. These sources will give you substantial overviews of your topic, included extensive discussion of the research literature/empirical studies on your topic. Will provide many leads to help you find research studies on your topic.
This is your comprehensive look-up tool to see if we have the research articles you are looking for. Search the article by title. If we own it, the item will come up near the top of the result list. If we don't own it, simply uncheck the "Available in Library Collection" limiter and you will find a record for the item with a link to "Request through interlibrary loan".
Contains full-text for 80+ peer-reviewed psychology journals published by the American Psychological Association and related groups. Most titles have full text from 1985 or the first journal issue; coverage of the remaining titles extends from the mid-1990s.
A comprehensive index to the literature of psychology and related fields, including entries for journal articles, books, dissertations, and other research materials. It indexes some 4.5 million sources, 40% of which are available in electronic or print full-text in our library.
Contains 500+ journals in psychology and behavioral science not included PsycARTICLES. More than 80% are full-text; almost all are peer-reviewed, many with coverage back to the 1970s.