Discuss amongst yourselves for 10-12 minutes and then report back to the large group.
Patron: Is there a way to eliminate meta-analysis and medical hypothesis from search engines? I want to just find the actual studies done for my topic and not the meta-analysis that have already been done.
Librarian: HI
Librarian: I think you'd better talk to the Health Sciences Library about how to do this. 206-543-3390
Librarian: Bye for now.
Librarian: Librarian ended chat session.
Librarian: Hello, my name is XXXXX. How can I help you?
Patron: Initially - i would like to search for what are the widely used curriculums in Early Childhood education and there effects on outcomes
Librarian: Okay, have you done any research on this yet?
Patron: not entirely sure how to navigate this search engine - i did background reading on google
Librarian: Great, well let's start at the library homepage. Are you there? http://www.lib.washington.edu/
Librarian: Click on Advanced Search under the main search box. This way you will be able to enter more than 1 search term.
Patron: yes
Librarian: Let's use keywords to help you find some resources that match your research interest.
Librarian: Keywords are key concepts and terms that are the essence of your question. In this case I might start with "early childhood education" and "outcomes".
Patron: i am interested in particular which curriculums used in early childhood education and their tie to outcomes
Patron: widely used..
Librarian: Let's try searching this at the same time. When you click Advanced Search, scroll down the page and you'll see 3 boxes to enter terms. Enter them here. You can deine them as a type of search term. I would start with keyword as the type of term. Yes let's also use "curriculum" as a term. Leave out outcomes to start.
Patron: ok
Librarian: This looks like a pretty good search to start with. You can now refine the results along the lefthand bar. under advanced options?
Librarian: You don't even need to go to advanced options. From your results page just scroll to the bottom. There are Topics that you can select to limit the results. But before that even, I think in the first 10 results many seem like they might be good matches. Why don't you browse those titles and see. Did you get this page of results?
Librarian: http://uwashington.worldcat.org.offcampus.lib.washington.edu/se arch?q=kw%3Aearly+childhood+education+kw%3Acurriculum&fq =&start=1&dblist=
Patron: right, however, I would like to evaluate widely used curriculums
Patron: in early childhood education and their tie with outcomes
Patron: perse, creative curriculum or Highscope
Librarian: You can refine your keywords in your search if you have particular curricula of interest. I did this here for highscope. These were the results.
Librarian: http://uwashington.worldcat.org.offcampus.lib.washington.edu/se arch?q=kw%3Aearly+childhood+education+kw%3Ahigh+scope+ curriculum&qt=results_page&dblist=
Librarian: The more specific terms you give the more directed your search will be.
Librarian: a comprehensive review of which are the widely used curriculums and why?
Librarian: in the USA
Librarian: The first link is an encyclopedia, but if you open the record and scroll to the bottom you can see that highscope is one of the terms tagged for this item. Presumably that curriculum is covered in the text. It looks like it covers quite a few techniques, so I think it would be comprehensive.
Librarian: The second correlates the relationship between curricula type and early childhood education, speaking to the outcomes part of your question.
Patron: which source are you viewing
Librarian: To focus on the US I would add that as a search term. I was looking at Curriculum Models in Early Childhood Education:
Librarian: http://uwashington.worldcat.org.offcampus.lib.washington.edu/ocl c/44265803
Patron: true, this is a great source. however, it does not cover some of the new up to date curriculums that are widely used
Librarian: You can limit to dates on the left side too. You could only look at things extremely recent this way.
Librarian: Try clicking on 2014.
Patron: ok - I will play around a bit and see ways in which to narrow my search
Patron: thank you
Librarian: You can use the same techniques in education-related databases too if you want to go more in depth. Here is a research guide to find more places to search if you like:
Librarian: http://guides.lib.washington.edu.offcampus.lib.washington.edu/ed ucation
Librarian: Is there anything else today?
Patron: Patron ended chat session.
Questions based on QUESTIONPOINT CHAT TRANSCRIPTS A learning resource for virtual reference in the classroom. http://wiki.questionpoint.org/f/Evaluating%20VR%20Transcripts%20v.2%20.pdf
Transcripts from University of Washington Libraries Chat Reference Transcript Assessment by Jackie Belanger, Kathleen Collins, Alyssa Deutschler, Rebecca Greer, Nancy Huling, Caitlan Maxwell, Ekaterini Papadopoulou, Lauren Ray, Robin Chin Roemer. https://www.lib.washington.edu/assessment/projects/chat-reference-assessment-project-2014-2016-final-report.
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