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ENC 1101: Written Communication: Campbell

Starting Page for All ENC1101 Courses

Librarian Introduction

Welcome to the Library Guide for Prof. Campbell, ENC1101

We are Theresa Smith-Ennis and Tim Kircher, your Venice campus library liaisons. If you need help, you can e-mail us at smitht@scf.edu or kirchet@scf.edu, or ask for us at the Venice campus library, building 300. Any of our colleagues are happy to help you out as well if we're not around. Your first research assignments can be confusing and overwhelming but we here at the library will help you make sense of it!

There are extremely helpful resources you can access directly from our website. 

Don't miss out on textbooks for in library use, study spaces you can reserve, events, tutorials, and our Ask a Librarian chat service.

MLA Citation

What is "MLA style?"

The MLA Citation style is a set of rules for how to format a paper and references to ensure that it is well organized, easy for the reader to follow, and follows various consistent procedures for providing the information that a reader would need to check references.

References are the sources that are used to inform your writing. Citations are a quick, consistently formatted way of presenting enough information about a source so that the reader can find it if they....

* Want to understand your thought process better by reading the works that informed you.

*Want to go deeper into a topic that you may only have briefly mentioned.

 *Allows readers to hold you accountable for using high quality information and giving proper credit to the creators of the works that influenced you.

Click here to view the SCF Library Guide to MLA Style.

Research Quick Tips

Start here if you are new to college research! Even if you think you know how to research, researching may mean something different to your instructor than it does to you, so make sure you're on the same page!

Consider a book!

Books: The Ultimate Rabbit Hole

Why books?

We here at SCF Libraries understand why you might be hesitant to rely on books for research:

- The internet seems more up to date.

- Databases make it easier to tell at a glance where the information you are using came from and if its from a scholarly article or peer reviewed.

- Text on a computer is also often quicker to skim thanks to hyperlinks and searchable text.

 

Here are some reasons to consider books, whether eBooks or print:

- They're not as hard to navigate as you think: tables of contents and indexes can make browsing even print books very efficient.

- Context is king! Ever read a Tweet or a short article and still not really understand what its about?

- If you're not already well versed in a topic, headlines and social media posts are like pieces to a thousand piece jigsaw puzzle that got dropped on the floor.

- Books give you the context you need to not just know trivia about a topic, but to understand how all the random facts and bits of trivia fit together.

- Tune out distractions: books don't have pop ups and notifications that break your concentration.

How do I find books?

The following tutorial will show you how to search for books of both the print and eBook variety. Or you can go straight to search here. Be sure to select "Books" from the "Material Type" menu.

You can also walk in and browse our print collection. Its organized according to the library of congress system.

Deeper Research

These resources are a bit more challenging to use but will take you to materials you can use to improve your understanding of a topic. These databases will contain scholarly articles from experts in their fields, the results of experiments, and other high level information.

Expect to try multiple search strategies and to use Advanced Search tools to try to find what you're looking for.

Finally, many of the sources will be from scholarly publications that assume a higher level of fluency in a topic so you may need to look up definitions and concepts you're less familiar with. 

Don't get discouraged! The writers whose works you are reading followed a very similar process of trial and error in order to put together a coherent narrative out of the pieces of evidence that they could find. Their reference pages represent many, many, many hours of careful searching, reading, and analysis.