Printers / Mobile / Screenreaders
test

   Click here for Raynor Memorial 
      Home Page

Research Guides

Ask A Librarian | Class Reserves (Ares) | Databases | MARQCAT
Click here for 
      Marquette University Home Page
Admin Sign In 

Math and Statistics  Tags: mathematics statistics academic_writing writing  

Guide to finding books, articles, web sites, podcasts and more. This page is updated and added to frequently.
Last update: Oct 02nd, 2009 URL: http://libguides.marquette.edu/mathematics  Print Guide  RSS Updates

Articles             Print Page
  
 

Why Articles?

Articles appear in publications such as magazines, journals, and newspapers.  They are published at regular intervals, e.g. daily, weekly, monthly, annually, etc.  Articles are good sources for:

  • recent research on a topic
  • very narrow topics
  • current events
  • contemporary accounts of past events and research
 

Quick Search

Quick Search in Science & Technology Article Databases
for:

 

 

Google Scholar

Broadly search the web for scholarly journal literature.  Remember, Google Scholar cannot search inside many of the MU databases.


(search results open in a new window)
 

Article Databases

Databases provide a systematic method of searching for articles, and other documents, on your topic. Some databases include full text of the documents they index but many do not. The top databases for math and statistics are:

  • MathSciNet  
      
    Covers pure and applied math and statistics in journal articles, conference proceedings, and books from Current Mathematical Publications and Mathematical Reviews. Usually contains either an author's abstract or a critical review. 1940 to present.
  • Applied Science and Tech Index  
      
    Provides indexing, abstracts and some full text articles for more than 390 periodicals, including math. Indexing 1983 to present; abstracts beginning in March 1993; some full text beginning in 1997.
  • INSPEC  
      
    Indexes a core group of over 100 titles primarily in applied mathematics. Also covers physics, electrical and computer science literature.
  • Dissertations and Theses  
      
    Indexes more than 2 million doctoral dissertations and master's theses. Includes full text content for nearly 900,000 dissertations. Extensive coverage of North American graduate schools, with coverage of some European universities since 1989.
 

Getting the Articles

The Libraries subscribe to over 24,000 journals, most in electronic format. There are a variety of ways to find out if the Libraries subscribe to the journals you need.

If you already have the citation to an article:

  • Use MARQCAT. Search by Title and enter the title of the journal, NOT the title or author of the article.

If you are looking at citations from within a database:

  • Use the FindIt@MU icon in the citation you are interested in. This will open another window and do one of two things

    • Display a list of databases with links. This indicates the FindIt widget may have found a source for electronic copy of the article. Click on the link to determine if a full text option is located.
    • Displays only a link to MARQCAT. Click the MARQCAT link to search the catalog. The journal may be available in print or fulltext through a source not searchable by the FindIt widget.

If you do not find the journal using FindIt@MU or MARQCAT, request the article through Interlibrary Loan. This can be done directly from the article citation within some databases.

 
 

Evaluating Articles

Critical thinking skills should be used when deciding whether an article is appropriate to use. Consider:

Type of Publication: Is it a popular magazine or newspaper, a trade journal, or a scholarly journal? (see below)
Purpose: Is the intent to inform, entertain, persuade or educate?
Objectivity: Are various sides or points-of-view represented?
Author: Does the author have expertise on the topic?
Date: Is the information current or timely for your topic?
Bibliography: Are the authors sources of information cited completely.

Types of Periodicals

Periodicals, journals, magazines fall into 'categories' determined by their overall purpose.

Popular: Written for general public; authors and editors usually journalists not experts in subject field; purpose is to provide current, societal/cultural news and discussion.
Trade: Written for individuals in a specific career/job or with a specific interest/hobby.  Authors are generally persons working int he field/hobby or journalists with specialized knowledge.  Articles discuss current issues but are not reports of research.
Scholarly: Written for researchers, educators, students, authors are other professionals.  Articles are reports of original research or other scholarly investigations/discussions.

 

Raynor Memorial Libraries | 1355 W Wisconsin Avenue | Milwaukee WI 53233 | (414) 288-7556 Info Desk
© 2008 Marquette University

Description

  Loading content... please wait