This document provides information on why some materials may not be included in WorldCat and strategies for finding resources not listed in catalogs or databases. It discusses that libraries are not obligated to add all materials to WorldCat, such as rental collections or local historical materials. Tools for alternative searching like Google Books, Google Scholar, and government portals are presented. Challenges with locating newspapers, archival materials, and journal articles are addressed, along with interlibrary loan strategies and print/online resources for reference assistance.
2. Why Isn’t it on WorldCat?!?
• Materials that could be included on WorldCat, but many
libraries choose not to-• A/V Materials
• Archival materials
• Materials that libraries do not wish to lend
• Local historical materials
• Bookmobile collections
• e-Journals
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3. Libraries Have No Obligation
to Add…
• Rental collections
• Reserve materials
• Classified materials (corporate libraries)
• Government Documents!
• Web pages/”ephemeral” electronic
resources
Guidelines for Contributing to WorldCat
» http://www.oclc.org/worldcat/contribute/guidelines/
default.htm
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5. Google Books & Google
Scholar
• http://books.google.com/
– Search the full text of books
– Also has magazine content! –Life Magazine and
many others in full text
• http://scholar.google.com
– More scholarly books and articles
– Includes “Find in a Library”
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6. Google—
Helpful Advanced Search Features
• Search for specific formats (i.e. .doc, .ppt,
.xls, etc)
• Search within specific domains (i.e. .edu
or .org)
• Search within specific years
• Search by language or country
• Search by parts of the page
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7. Phrase Searching
• Very helpful when seeking an article or book
title
• Done either by “putting quotes” around the
phrase or using phrase option in advanced
web search
• Probably the most helpful web searching
technique for finding unique items
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8. Invisible vs. Deep Web
• What is it?
– Valuable resources that may be “hidden”
– “invisible web”-content that isn’t indexed, example: a
sound file where information resides.
– “deep web”-embedded dynamic content (ex: government
database)
– http://www.weblens.org/
invisible.html
Visible vs.
invisible
content
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10. USA.gov
• Directory of U.S. Government Information
• Searchable
• Links to web resources and full text
documents
• Fedworld.gov
• Another portal site for U.S. Government
Information
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11. Catalog of U.S. Government Publications
• http://catalog.gpo.gov
• Historical and current publications
• Direct links to full text when available
• “More than 500,000 records generated since July 1976
are contained in the CGP and it is updated daily. The
catalog will grow to include records for publications dating
back to the late 1800s, making the CGP the central point
for locating new and historical Government publications.”
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12. Government InformationSpecialized Search Sites
• Science.gov
• Science and Technology Resources
• “Provides the scientist, engineer, and
science aware citizen with easy access to
key government web sites”
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13. A Sampling of Government Information
Portals
• United States Department of Energy, OPENNET
• https://www.osti.gov/opennet/advancedsearch.jsp
• United States Environmental Protection Agency
• http://www.epa.gov/epahome/search.html
• United States Department of Transportation
• http://ntl.bts.gov
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16. Sample Newspaper Citation—
Title Changes for the “Atlanta Newspaper”
•
Other Titles: Atlanta constitution (Atlanta, Ga. : 1881); Issues for Sunday and Monday
June 4, 1950-Sept. 12, 1976 published as:; Atlanta journal and the Atlanta constitution;
Issues for Saturday Sept. 18, 1976-May 26, 1979 and for Sun. Sept. 19, 1976-Feb. 5,
1979 published as:; Atlanta journal and the Atlanta Constitution; Issues for Saturday June
2, 1979-Aug. 9, 1997 and for Sun. Feb. 12, 1978-Aug. 10, 1997 published as:; Atlanta
journal the Atlanta constitution; Issues for Saturday and Sunday Aug. 16, 1997-Nov. 4,
2001 published as:; Atlanta journal-constitution; Issues for Saturday Aug. 16, 1997-Nov.
3, 2001 published as:; Atlanta journal-constitution Saturday; Issues for Sunday Aug. 17,
1997-Nov. 4, 2001 published as:; Atlanta journal-constitution Sunday; Atlanta journalconstitution; <May 25, 2000->Earlier Title: Daily constitution (Atlanta, Ga.); (DLC)sn
83016861; (OCoLC)10177773 Later Title: Atlanta journal (Atlanta, Ga. : 1889);
(DLC)sn 82015426; (OCoLC)08807964; Atlanta journal-constitution (Atlanta, Ga. : 2001);
1539-7459; (DLC)sn2002058112; (OCoLC)48488341
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17. Newspapers—
What’s Helpful?
• Local resources (library catalogs, locally
available indexing)
• Archival holdings at the newspaper’s web
page (Searchable, but full article=$$$)
• Newspaper Databases (Lexis-Nexis,
Newspaper Source, many others)
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18. Newspaper Pages
•
•
•
•
Example—Typical news sites-AJC ($)
Search news “Archives” in Google
United States Newspaper Program
http://www.neh.gov/projects/usnp.html
• Lists NEH funded newspaper projects (with access info)
from around the country! These feed into:
• Chronicling America (growing rapidly!)
• http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/
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19. Archival Materials
• Pitfalls:
• Lots of uncataloged material
• Fragile material or strange formats
• Libraries and archives are not able to lend
most archival materials, however…
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21. An Online Archives Tour
• The Library of Congress, American Memory
• http://memory.loc.gov
• The University of North Carolina, Documenting the American
South
• http://docsouth.unc.edu/
• CONTENTdm—More libraries &archives digitize their
collections!
• http://collections.contentdmdemo.com/cdm4/browse.php
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22. Periodical Articles,
Science & Medical Citations
Pitfalls:
• Complex titles with abbreviations
• Limited indexing of varied quality
• Limited availability
• Expensive resources
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23. Other Periodical Helpers
• Full text databases
• Indexing locators (Ulrich’s, PubList)
• Publisher web pages ($$$)
• Open access resources
• Google magazines
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24. Directory of Open Access
Journals (and Books <new>)
• DOAJ
• http://www.doaj.org/
• DOAB
• http://www.doabooks.org/
• Open Access to traditional medical journals at PubMed
Central
• http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/
25. Interlibrary Loan:
Strategies for Getting It!
• A/V Materials
• ALA Interlibrary Loan request forms
• Blank Workforms (WCRS)
• Commercial Document Suppliers
• The Library of Congress
• Tips and tricks/Discussion
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26. AV Materials
• Lloyd’s List of Free LVIS AV Lenders:
• http://www.shareill.org/index.php?title=Lloyd%27s_List
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27. ALA Forms
• Request Materials “offline”
• Useful for request uncataloged materials
• Useful request from libraries or other institutions who do
not use OCLC WCRS
• Printable form
• Available at:
• http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?
Section=Home&template=/ContentManagement/ContentD
isplay.cfm&ContentID=31579
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28. Blank Workform
(in WCRS)
• May be used to request material that is not in
WorldCat
• Keeps the request in the system!
• Flexible (Copy or Loan)
• Also: Guidelines for the Interlibrary Loan of Rare
and Unique Materials:
• http://www.ala.org/acrl/standards/rareguidelines
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29. Commercial Document Suppliers
• There are many out there
• Some are listed on OCLC (have a symbol)
• Commonly used:
• The British Library Document Supply Centre
• Infotrieve
• Center for Research Libraries
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30. The Library of Congress?
• Yes! Under certain circumstances, the
Library of Congress will lend to you!
• “The Library of Congress serves as a source
for material not available through local, state
or regional libraries”
• http://www.loc.gov/rr/loan/loanweb2.html
• Enter “DLC” five times
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31. International Borrowing
• Source clarification for foreign language
materials? Ulrich’s
• IFLA-Guidelines for international borrowing
and lending
• http://www.ifla.org
• IFLA Vouchers
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32. Don’t be Shy!
• The resource sharing community wants to
help
• Ask questions—pick up the phone/send an
e-mail
• Establish local partnerships (nearby
libraries)
• Utilize online help at other libraries
• ILL Listservs—e-mail citation questions!
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33. Know Your Local Partners
• Form relationships with other libraries in
your community (city, county, state)
• Communicate and share
• Know your unique resources, and share
when possible!
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35. Helpful Print Resources
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•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Reader’s Guide to Periodical Literature
Book Review Index/Digest
Local Newspaper Indexes (yours and others)
Humanities Index
Social Sciences Index
Ulrich’s
Suggestions?
Maintain a list of your “gems”
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36. Thank You for Attending!
Questions?
Russell Palmer
1.800.999.8558
russell.palmer@lyrasis.org
Hinweis der Redaktion
Do a sample search: medicine wheels Check out the "Search within this book" feature and click on the links under "Buy this Book" to go straight to an online bookstore where you can purchase it. If the book was scanned from a library, you can also click on the library link to find a local library that has the book. Google Scholar: Google Scholar enables you to search specifically for scholarly literature, including peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, preprints, abstracts and technical reports from all broad areas of research. Use Google Scholar to find articles from a wide variety of academic publishers, professional societies, preprint repositories and universities, as well as scholarly articles available across the web. Google Print finds pretty much any kind of book you can imagine: fiction, non-fiction, reference, scholarly, textbooks, children's books, scientific, medical, professional, educational, and other books of all kinds. As we add books from our library partners, our book selection will continue to increase, and you'll also be able to find out-of-print, rare, and public domain books. You cannot see the entire book, just certain parts of it.
After discussing advanced search tools – you can push them exercise 2 – give them about 20 minutes to work on and then share results.
No matter how good you are at searching- there are valuable resources on the web that search engines will not find for you. You can get to them if you know the actual URL but typically a search will not yield this information. Typical examples: databases of articles, data, statistics, government documents. The “invisible” refers to “invisible to search engines.” Various estimates put the size of the Invisible web at from two to five hundred times the content of the visible web! Why are sites invisible? The search engine doesn’t know about the page – hasn’t been submitted or the bot hasn’t found it Content changes so often that search engines have decided to not index it Search engine is asked to NOT index site The search engine cannot find non-HTML content (this is becoming less-rare.) The search engine cannot locate the page to index them because it encounters a request for a password or authorization. Site to show: http://invisible-web.net/ Search: Legal and Criminal Information/ subcat: Documents and Records The idea here is that this information would probably not come up with a traditional search tool. Open WorldCat is a good example of information that “used” to be invisible but is becoming less-so. Can anyone come up with any other examples of information that used to be harder to access but not today? More examples of other search tools for searching the Invisible Web on the handout.