GEO 300: Environmental Conservation and Sustainability

Course Instructor
Recommended Research Database (for GEO 300)

The instructor recommends Academic Search Premier for the Critical Thinking Paper assignment.
Academic Search Premier (search tips )
Academic Search Premier spans virtually every area of academic study. Provides some full-text and covers 1975-present.

*Please note:  The only acceptable articles for the critical thinking paper are the ones retrieved when the scholarly (peer reviewed) box is checked in the Academic Search Premier database. 

Course Librarian
Understanding and identifying peer reviewed/scholarly sources Articles from scholarly journals go through the peer review process.  An expert (or several experts) in a field writes the article and then a group of the authors' peers (usually anonymous) reviews the material to make sure that it is of sound science and scholarship and suitable for the publication and its target audience. The reviewers often suggest changes to the paper that are necessary before the work is published.

Scholarly articles often take a long time (6 months -2 years) to be published from the time they are submitted to the journal.

Why use scholarly articles? They are authoritative, and often focus on a very specific area of research. They can also lead you to other experts in the field through citation tracking and cited references.

Watch a ~4 minute review (with audio) demonstrating how to distinguish peer reviewed journals from other types of periodicals (Developed and made available by Vanderbilt University Library).


Suggestions for identifying peer reviewed articles:
Essential resources to know about

In addition to the Academic Search Premier database (described in a different section of this page), the following links may be useful to you.

Library catalog

Search for books and journal titles here.

Summit catalog
Search the catalogs of 36 regional libraries and request delivery of books that OSU does not own.  Delivery typically takes 2-3 business days.  You are notified by email when books arrive.

Ejournals

If you find an article in Academic Search Premier that is not available in full-text directly, you may find it by using the ejournals list. (tips for searching ejournals)

Style Guides

Here are two suggestions for style guides. There are other options available.  No matter which style you choose, be sure it meets the requirements of the assignment.  Check with your instructor if you are not sure about the style format you wish to use.

APA (American Psychological Association)
Book: Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association
Call number: BF 76.7 .P83 2001 (in reference collection)

Online: APA Documentation from U Wisconsin
OR
Look for the APA Formatting and Style Guide under the "Research and Citation" section from The OWL at Purdue

MLA (Modern Language Association)
Book: MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers
Call number: LB2369 .G53 2003 (in reference collection)

Online: MLA Documentation from U Wisconsin
OR
Look for the "MLA Formatting and Style Guide" under the "Research and Citation" section from The OWL at Purdue

Additional Help

Overview of Citing (why, when, etc)
For more information about citing your sources, check out the citing sources section of the library's research tutorial.

Course materials on reserve

The GEO 300 instructor has placed multiple copies of the following texts on reserve:

Book cover from librarything.com

 

Allen, J. Student Atlas of World Politics,  7th Edition, Guilford, CT, McGraw Hill/Dushkin.  2005.

 


 

Brown, L. Plan B 2.0, Rescuing a Planet under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble, New York: W.W. Norton.  2006.

The call numbers for these books and other materials on reserve are available in the library catalog. Course reserves can be checked out from the Circulation desk.