EBSCO Lab Assignment
EBSCO Lab Assignment
EBSCO Lab Assignment
Okobi
Terry Wasserman
Searching EBSCO Assignment
Spring 2009/ILS 504
Professor Okobi
2 Wasserman, T. Searching EBSCOhost. ILS 504/Spr 09. Okobi
Introduction:
proficiently. We were then assigned three questions to answer using only scholarly
In order to search for the most pertinent information, I thought it prudent to search
multiple databases via EBSCOhost. Given the nature of the topic, I chose to
History & Life; Art Abstracts; Historical Abstracts; History Reference Center;
scholarly articles there. I chose the History Reference Center because this historically-
minded database was likely to have references to historical works of art that had been
problem that affects most humanities disciplines throughout the world. I chose
International Political Science Abstract because the theft of (important) art is a political
problem and the transportation of stolen art often happens internationally. Lastly, I chose
Art Abstracts because there is a chance that the theft of an artwork would be discussed
within a journal devoted to the study of art. Interestingly, I found relevant titles in all the
In order to find relevant materials, I performed a Boolean search. After much trial
and error, I found that the best results were found via the following search terms: art
AND (stolen OR theft). I limited the search to scholarly (peer-reviewed) journals and
filtered the publication date to 2006-2009. Initially, I had tried to use the subject
searches, but found many more irrelevant references that way. I retrieved 51 titles, some
of which were off-topic (for instance, an article referencing a sculpture entitled “Stolen”),
Minyard, K. 2007. Adding Tools to the Arsenal: Options for Restitution from the
Intermediary Seller and Recovery for Good-Faith Possessors of Nazi-Looted Art. Texas
International Law Journal, 43(1), 115-134. Retrieved from Academic Search Premier.
Apter, E. 2008. What is Yours, Ours, and Mine: Authorial Ownership and the
Creative Commons. October(Cambridge, Mass.), 126, 91-114. Retrieved from Art
Abstracts.
Carstens, A. 2007. Examining the Claims of “Universal Museums” and the Please
of “Nations Stolen Blind”: a Review of “Imperialism, Art and Restitution.” Art Antiquity
and Law, 12(2), 179-190. Retrieved from Art Abstracts.
Graham, E. 2007. Buddha’s Jigsaw. American Scholar, 76 (3), 19. Retrieved from
History Reference Center.
Jackson, M. 2008. Archaeology, Looting and the Luxury Arts in the XXI Century.
Art Antiquity and Law, 13 (1), 59-73. Retrieved from Art Abstracts.
4 Wasserman, T. Searching EBSCOhost. ILS 504/Spr 09. Okobi
Lane, D., Bromley, D., Hicks, R. & Mahoney, J. 2008. Time Crime: The
Transnational Organization of Art and Antiquities Theft. Journal of Contemporary
Criminal Justice, 24(3), 243-262. Retrieved from Academic Search Premier.
Prott, L. 2007. Van Leeuwen, the Compulsive Collector. Art Antiquity and Law,
12 (1), 111-112. Retrieved from Art Abstracts.
2. Reader’s Advisory Services Bibliography: Five articles published within the past five
Library Information Science and Technology Abstracts database. I chose this database
I performed a Boolean search for reader AND advisory, limiting the publication
year to 2004-2009 and searching only for scholarly or peer-reviewed journals. I chose to
only view Academic Journals and not Reviews. When I limited my search (50 results)
further to include only the subject Readers’ advisory services (9 results), a number of
relevant articles disappeared, so I undid that limitation. I found the following references
Hollands, N. & Trott, B. 2006. Improving the Model for Interactive Readers’
Advisory Service. Reference & User Services Quarterly, 45(3), 205-212.
Moyer, J. & Weech, T. 2005. The education of public librarians to serve leisure
readers in the United States, Canada and Europe. New Library World, 106(1/2), 67-79.
Retrieved from Library, Information Science & Technology Abstracts database.
Trott, B. & Van Fleet, C. 2008. Education for Readers’ Advisory Service in
Library and Information Science Programs, Challenges and Opportunities. Reference &
User Services Quarterly, 47(3), 224-229. Retrieved from Library, Information Science &
Technology Abstracts database.
Trott, B. 2008. Building on a Firm Foundation: Readers’ Advisory over the Next
Twenty-Five Years. Reference & User Services Quarterly, 48 (2), 132-135. Retrieved
from Library, Information Science & Technology Abstracts database.
I chose these five articles because I thought they would best suit a course
discussion—the Chang articles being an interesting devil’s advocate, the Hollands article
claims to give assistance in improving readers’ advisory services, the Moyer article
discussing the education of librarians’ on the topic at hand and the two Trott articles being
very much on topic and au currant. All of the articles from Reference & User Services
Quarterly (Hollands’ and the two Trott articles) are available in PDF full text versions.
3. Perform a visual search to find images of Durban, South Africa and its environs and
Collection. I then double-clicked on Visual Search and chose all of the possible image
types except Map, which did not seem relevant. I did a Boolean search of Durban AND
South AND Africa and retrieved 25 images, nearly all of which were copyrighted by the
Canadian Press (3 were UPI and 4 were Getty Images). However, few of pictures were
good images of the city itself. The following were the best images I located:
6 Wasserman, T. Searching EBSCOhost. ILS 504/Spr 09. Okobi
The following is a screenshot of my visual search for images of Durban, South Africa.
As of February 23, 2009, there are six new features on EBSCO: two new digital
archival collections and four new user-friendly features meant to enhance the researchers
use of EBSCOhost. The two new digital archives are both currently in beta version (ie.
not the finished, complete version). The first is the American Antiquarian Society’s
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Historical Periodical Collection which contains a set of titles from the Revolutionary War
period, but will eventually contain titles from the 17th to 19th centuries of American
history. The second digital collection is the American Theological Library Association’s
works written between the 13th and early 20th centuries; mostly the 19th century.
The features include SmartText which searches for relevant results if the initial
search results in zero hits, Image QuickView Searching which permits searching of image
titles and captions as well as limiting image types (charts, photos or diagrams) and Search
History enhancements which now allow the user to delete multiple searches, rerun/update
searches after switching databases and a new Preference to clear the Find field once the
search has appeared in Search History. In addition, the EBSCOhost Content Viewer
allows users to look at historical documents in ways that not only approximate the actual
handling of documents but are actually improvements over the physical reality of
examining a document. The Content Viewer allows the user to zoom, pan, rotate, find
Summary:
I also came to realize its pitfalls. Though peer-reviewed article was always checked off,
general and popular articles often appeared in the results. And the publication dates
typed in in the basic search were never adhered to, though it was easy to fix this problem
in the result screen. But the biggest downfall of this search has been the Durban, South
Africa image search. Through Google I was able to find many more useful images than
8 Wasserman, T. Searching EBSCOhost. ILS 504/Spr 09. Okobi
via EBSCOhost. All told, this was a difficult, but very worthwhile assignment for a
budding librarian.