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FYSP 082: Transportation Justice: Home

Before the Library Session

1. Read "Methods to Prioritize Pop-up Transit Infrastructure" from the journal Transport Findings

2. Reflect on the following questions: 

  • What argument is the article making? 
  • What kinds of evidence are used to support the argument?
  • How do the authors document that evidence?
  • Who is the intended audience? 

Search Strategy

Here is a good, basic formula for getting started with your research:

  • Begin by narrowing down your topic and developing an initial research question.
  • Use the keyword brainstorming worksheet to help you tweak your research question, identify keywords and related terms, and keep track of what you find.  
  • Search in a library catalog (Summon, OBISOhioLINK and/or WorldCat) to find books and reference sources.  These sources will:
    • provide BACKGROUND and CONTEXT
    • REVIEW and SUMMARIZE earlier work
    • help you FOCUS your topic and
    • provide CITATIONS to important books, journal articles, conference papers, interviews, etc.
  • Next, search research databases to find articles. The library has hundreds of databases; those listed on this guide are good places to begin.
  • You may also wish to use Google Scholar to search the Internet.  This is a great tool for doing cited reference searches.

Summon

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Search approximately 300 million books, scholarly articles, newspaper articles, data, digital audio, digital video, digital images, government documents and more. It draws from the library catalog (OBIS), many of the full text and article indexing databases, as well as digital repositories from colleges, universities, research centers, and other open-access archives on the web. 

Research Help

Chat with us during online help hours

Email us at reference@oberlin.edu

Schedule a research appointment

Watch "How do I?" video tutorials

Librarian

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Elizabeth Sullivan
she/her/hers
Contact:
Terrell Main Library, Mudd 103
4407755028