Showing posts with label bibliography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bibliography. Show all posts

Friday, December 19, 2014

You Can Now Export Your Citations From EBSCO to EasyBib!

If your school is fortunate enough to have access the EBSCO databases, students can now export their citations directly into EasyBib. Schools with an EasyBib Pro account have the ability to save their bibliographies and come back at another date to finish their work. The following tutorial is based on a school with EBSCO and an EasyBib Pro account. (For a pro account, make sure you or your student is logged into EasyBib BEFORE the steps below.) The bibliography we are making is based on MLA format. If you want another format, you must tell EBSCO under "preferences".


1. Log into your school account


2. Choose which database you wish to use



3. After you search for a specific topic and choose an article,
your screen should look like this one. Choose EXPORT
from the right side of the screen.



4. You will then see the EXPORT MANAGER. Choose DIRECT EXPORT TO EASYBIB.



5. You will be brought to EasyBib and see this screen above. Arrows indicate what you should pick.



6. Presto! Your bibliographic entry is listed.

Problems? Your EBSCO account might not have the export manager activated. Call EBSCO's customer service for help.

Monday, October 7, 2013

EasyBib in Depth: It's More Than Just Citations

NOTE: When I began working on this post, I hadn't attended the NJASL (NJ Association of School Librarians) Conference. Saturday I had the pleasure of meeting Emily Grover and Brad Heringer, who both work for EasyBib. Their presentation pushed me to finish this post on EasyBib and what it has to offer.

Many of you have heard of EasyBib, one of many free online citation generators. You and your students will find much more free stuff here. When you enter the home page, you will see many tabs to choose from. Below these tabs is the Citation Generator, where your students can pick from over 59 different sources to cite.


Let's first explore the one you are familiar with; the citation tab. under this section, there is a long list of downloadable pdf files in three different formats: MLA, ALA and Chicago/Turabian. Let's look at MLA, since that's what our high school students will be using. Roll your mouse over Citation Guides and MLA and you will see a long list of guides to choose from. All the guides are visually pleasing and easy to follow, so students won't have a problem understanding them.


Below on the left side of the page there is a list of Info Lit resources, which include, Website Evaluation Bootcamp, Plagiarism Prevention Series, Getting by with Google Presentation, and a Graphic Organizer handout. You can easily subscribe to any of the EasyBib series or their newsletter by filling in your name and email.

Now let's click on the research tab (on the HOME page) and search the term "school uniforms".
When students search on the EasyBib site, they are given results which rate the source as either credible, not credible or no rating. As you will notice in the image below, sources can be sorted in different ways. It is very easy to cite each and every one on the list just by clicking "Cite it".

Educators have a myriad of resources at their disposal on this site. From the home page, click "Educator Blog" which will lead you to a blog page with several choices, including Educator Resources, Product Resources, Professional Development and Student Resources. Let's first look at the Educator Resources.
There is a long list of handouts, including lesson plans, flyers, and the EasyBib Community. (social media sites under EasyBib) The Professional Development tab takes teachers to a listing of webinars, and the Student Resources offer research, citation, writing and topic guides, which can either be read online or saved as pdf files.

The only concern I have is with the left column roll-over categories. When you mouse-over a topic and it opens to a longer list, it moves too quickly and makes it difficult to pick what you would like to click on. I'm sure that it something that the site's webmaster can easily fix. In the meantime, I'm directing my students to EasyBib so that they can be information literate. For me, it's a no-brainer!

Friday, October 12, 2012

22 Great Places If You Teach Research Skills

If you are a teacher-librarian or media specialist, you are the one responsible for making sure students have learned the proper research skills. Since all students need to how to do research, why are school districts still cutting jobs for our position? Once kids get to middle and high school, they need to know how to do certain things tied to research, including a bibliography, website evaluation, searching techniques and so much more. Below you will find sites to assist you in teaching research skills for all ages.Use the Teacher-Librarians tab at the top to find a megalist of stuff for you.

The 6 Online Research Skills Your Students Need- from Scholastic

Copyright, Fair Use and Research Skills for Elementary Students
- LiveBinder

Doing Research at the Elementary Level
- written by technology teacher Mary Beth Hertz

Evaluating Information Sources Worksheet- for older students

The Future of Research- written by middle school librarian Jennifer LaGarde

Google Scholar- advanced scholarly searches

Infomine- scholarly Internet searches

iResearch: Information Skills for Life
- 10 modules (covers plagiarism and searching databases) each include a PDF download

The Free Library- over 20 million articles and books

K-4 Research Materials- LiveBinder

Kentucky Virtual Library's How to Do Research- excellent interactive poster designed like a game board


Research it Right- from Acadia University's Library; animated interactive


Research Skills Lesson Plans- from Lesson Planet


Research Skills Worksheets- from TeAchnology; covers various topic areas 


Research Skills Worksheets- teacher-reviewed; grades listed


Research Skills Unit- for 8th grade students


Rutgers University's R.I.O.T.- wonderful interactive modules include: Selecting a Topic, Finding Sources, Selecting Keywords, Identifying Citations, Evaluating Sources.


State Library of Victoria- research skills for grades 5-9


Teaching Research Skills to Young Students- the role of the media specialist is explained




Teaching the Ten Steps to Better Web Research from SweetSearch


Using Critical Thinking to find Trustworthy Websites-video lesson by N.Y. middle school teacher Emily Koch (Grades 6-8)

Wading Through the Web: Teaching Internet Research Strategies- Three complete 45-minute lessons for grades 6-8

LIKE WHAT YOU SEE? Why not subscribe to this blog or follow me on Twitter. 

Saturday, November 26, 2011

For Research: 13 Types of Citation Generators

A few days ago, my niece asked me for information about how to format a bibliography. I couldn't help but tell her the story of how "when I was in high school" we had to follow a formula which the teacher provided on a handout. Each book, newspaper article, magazine article done by hand and then typed on the typewriter for my research paper. "You are so fortunate, today.." I told my niece. There are free programs on the Internet which will practically do all the work for you, including putting your bibliography in a Microsoft Word document. So I sent her a small list of my favorite programs, and then expanded the list here. I've starred my personal favorites.





Bibomatic- for books only; enter the ISBN number of a book for the citation

CiteBite- link directly to specific quotes on web pages

CiteFast- covers MLA, APA, Chicago and newspaper, magazine, web site, journal, book

EasyBib*- also now has an iPhone app where you can scan the ISBN number on a book



GoBiblio- free bibliography and citation generator

KnightCite- enter the information in the blank fields and your citation is generated; covers MLA, APA, Chicago

NoodleBib Express- free version of Noodle Tools

OttoBib- for books only; enter the ISBN number of a book for the citation

Son of Citation Machine- for APA, MLA, Chicago, Turabian formats

Zotero*- keep all your research in one spot


LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

AddToAny