Google Scholar is a tool for finding books and journal articles that you might normally get from a library. Where possible, it provides links to online versions and to library copies to help you locate an item.
When to Use It
Use Google Scholar to find scholarly articles and books, verify citations, and explore related resources. When books are available through Google Books, some of their content may be available online.
How to Use It
Go to Google Scholar (http://scholar.google.com).
Note: Setting your school in Scholar Preferences will help you make direct connections to online sources provided by your library. If you want to locate sources in many different libraries, add WorldCat in addition to your library. (Remember to save your preferences.)
In your search results, you can connect to an online version if there is a linked option following the item’s title. (If you’ve added Ohio State under preferences, a Find It link is shown to provide a link to full-text or to help you request the item if it’s not available online. If you’ve added WorldCat to you preferences, the Library Search link displays the WorldCat record, which shows all of the libraries that own the item. If there are multiple references to the same item, Google Scholar groups them. You can click the versions link following a title to see a list of all versions.)
Additional Tips
- Authors related to your search are shown in the left column to help you find related content.The Recent Articles link allows you to limit your search results by date.
- Advanced Scholar Search provides additional search fields such as author, publication, and date, as well as phrase matching and word exclusion. You can also limit by subject area.
Candela Citations
- Choosing & Using Sources: A Guide to Academic Research. Authored by: Teaching & Learning, Ohio State University Libraries. Provided by: The Ohio State University. Located at: https://osu.pb.unizin.org/choosingsources/. License: CC BY: Attribution