Online Learning Support: How to Access Library Resources

This activity can help spark the difference between academic and popular research resources. Have students search on a concept relevant to the course material in Wikipedia and Google or DuckDuckGo. Then, have them do the same searches in Gale Ebooks and the UW Libraries Search. Have students post their compare & contrast analysis to Canvas.

Question prompts could include:

Formulating a Research Topic or Question

Have students watch this ‘concept mapping’ video and then create their own concept map. They can scan or take a picture of their map and post it to Canvas. Have students comment on each other’s maps to ask questions and/or offer additional ideas.

Search Strategies

If students are at the point of needing to start research for an assignment, have them watch this Boolean Tutorial or read this Tutorial Page. Then, have them construct their own searches using Boolean and try the searches out in the UW Libraries Search or a database. Have students post their Boolean searches in Canvas, listing the details of a couple of books or articles they found, how the sources relate to their research topic/question, and how the sources inform their thinking.

Finding Journal Articles

If students need to begin finding journal articles for their research they can use this Academic Search Complete tutorial. Have students post their findings to Canvas including citation information, brief annotations and, descriptions of how the source(s) relates to their research topic/question along with some thoughts on how the source contributes to their path of inquiry.
Students can access Academic Search Complete from the right side of the Databases A-Z page, or they can find other discipline-specific databases in our Research Guides.

Evaluating Sources

Provide students with a source or have them find one to evaluate using these Evaluating Sources Criteria. Have students post their source and responses to Canvas. An alternative would be to provide students with two sources – one academic and one popular – and complete the same exercise but also have them do some comparing and contrasting of the two considering the evaluation criteria.

Analyzing Images

Have students find two images relevant to the course content, using the Internet or databases listed in the Library’s image guide, Image Databases & Resources (search tips for finding images are available in the guide). Ask students to read the visual literacy resources linked from the Evaluating Images page and use the guiding questions on the page to analyze and evaluate the images they have chosen. Students can post their images and evaluations to Canvas. Have students cite their images according to the guidelines on the image guide Citing & Copyright page.

Media Literacy

Ask students to find two news articles on a course theme, one in the New York Times (or another “mainstream” news source), and one from the Library’s Ethnic NewsWatch database or Alt-PressWatch database. Have students post their findings and analysis on Canvas.

Questions prompts could include:

Primary / Archival Research

Ask students to find two primary/archival sources in one of the Library’s many historical databases or a web archive.
Ask students to post their findings and analysis to Canvas.

Question prompts could include:

Chat with a UW Librarian

University of Washington Bothell & Cascadia College
Campus Library
Box 358550
18225 Campus Way NE
Bothell, WA 98011-8245
425-352-5340 (Voice & Relay)


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Land Acknowledgment: The University of Washington Bothell & Cascadia College Campus Library occupies Land that has been inhabited by Indigenous Peoples since time immemorial. Specifically, this campus is located on Sammamish Land from which settler colonists forcibly removed Coast Salish Peoples to reservations in the mid-19th century. Today, descendants of the Sammamish are members of several Coast Salish communities.