From the Two-Minute Tutorials Series by Cal State LA Library.
Sometimes you don't know enough about a topic to search effectively. Encyclopedias and other reference sources give concise overviews of topics that can help you get to know the topic so you can do better searches for in-depth and scholarly information. This includes:
High-quality images of historical clothing, non-scholarly articles, eBooks, and encyclopedia articles.
Encyclopedia articles written by professional writers to give concise and accurate overviews of a wide range of topics, people, places, and things.
Biography In Context merges Gale's authoritative reference content, including Lives & Perspectives, with periodicals and multimedia. Users can also search for people based on name, occupation, nationality, ethnicity, birth/death dates and places, or gender, as well as by keyword and full text.
It offers authoritative reference content alongside, videos, audio selections, images, primary sources, and magazine and journal articles from hundreds of major periodicals and newspapers. This resource is continuously updated to ensure users have access to the very latest information.
Wikipedia is similar to other encyclopedias, except that the authors can be anyone instead of professional writers. This means that some writers are experts in the topic, and others are regular people like you and me.
Like all encyclopedias, Wikipedia should be used as a starting place for research and not as an authoritative source for your research projects.
This tutorial explains how to use Wikipedia as an exploratory tool and where it can appropriately fit in the research process.
By ClipInfoLit, Creative Commons license CC BY