Skip to Main Content

GPS: Shelter the World: Search Tips

WPI Library Search

Search WPI LIBRARY SEARCH for books, articles, media and more!

 

Top 10 Search Tips

  1. Ask a librarian: Searching and researching is what we do. Let us work with you to make your searching more productive.

  2. Use search filters on the search results page. Some of the most common filters are:

    1. Date

    2. Source Format – book, journal, video

    3. Source Type – Academic Journals, Magazines, Newspapers

    4. Subject – Keywords and phrases found prominently in your search results. Add these as additional search terms.

  3. Identify your topic’s key concepts and their synonyms: Add synonyms for your keywords and concepts to increase the number of relevant search results.

  4. Use the FullTextFinder icon on the search results page. If you only have the summary/abstract of an article, click on the FullTextFinder to search all 200+ library databases for the full-text.

  5. Use Interlibrary Loan (ILL). Submit an ILL request to get full-text journal articles, books and book chapters.

  6. Check bibliographies for additional relevant sources.

  7. Check “cited by” links on search results page.

  8. Check “related articles” links on search results page.

  9. Use Google search features to focus on one website type (e.g. .edu, .gov, .org, .au).

    1. Examples:

      1. Community garden site:.gov

      2. Fauna site:.nz

  10. Ask a librarian!

Additional Search Tips

Use these search terms to narrow or broaden your search:

Term

Example

Result

AND

media AND bias

Narrows the search to entries containing both terms.

OR

beer OR wine

Broadens the search to entries containing either term.

NOT

bat NOT baseball

Excludes entries containing the second term.

“ ”

“social work”

Retrieves results containing the exact phrase in quotes.

?

globali?ation

Wildcard: Retrieves both globalization and globalisation.

*

doctor*

Truncation: Retrieves doctor, doctors, doctored.

 

"How-To": Library Searching in 60 Seconds

"How-To": Booking a Research Consultation