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Child Development

Instructor: Ms. Carol Stevens
Child Development 125
 
This guide is intended as a research tool to help you complete your outside reading assignment.  In summary:  you are expected to compare two different magazine and/or journal articles on the same subject.  Please review this research assignment.
 
Finding Journal Articles:

What is a journal?

A journal is an ongoing publication on a specific discipline. Journals contain articles written by scholars. Journals are more timely than books, journal articles are subject to peer review, they are specialized and focused, and they generally answer specific questions with empirical research.

Sometimes it is difficult to distinguish between a journal approved by your instructor and a magazine that is not approved by your instructor. For example, the periodical titled "Parenting" is not considered a journal.

 Journals

Periodicals include journals and magazines

Journals publish articles written by scholars and researchers. Journals are often published by professional associations. Articles in journals usually include bibliographies.

Examples:
Child Development
Child Study Journal

  Magazines publish articles written for a general audience. Articles in magazines rarely include bibliographies.

Examples:
Parenting
Time


How do I find a journal article?

STEP 1: Access Infotrac:Onefile.
Go to the Library homepage -> Magazines/Journals, and select
InfoTrac.

Infotrac is a periodical research database allow you to find articles from journals and magazines. A search of a periodical index results in citations. Citations identify the actual articles.

Infotrac:

periodical database

leads to
arrow

Citation

"Child and Health"
Noakes, Madeline and Resto, Jeri.
Child Development
25 Nov. 2007: 92

 

leads to
arrow

Article text.

"The formation of the ideas of children constitutes a study equally interesting from a literary and a scientific point of view..."

 

Other Child Development Resources

Books:

Search the Library Catalog for books on your subject using specific search terms.  Or you may want to browse the library shelves in the following sections:

  • BF (child psychology)
  • E (children and socialization)
  • HQ (child development and family)
  • LB, LC (children and education)
  • RC (child psychiatry)
  • RJ (child care/child rearing/ pediatrics)

Suggested Websites:

American Sociological Society http://www.asanet.org/

Anna Freud Center http://www.annafreudcentre.org/

Children’s Defense Fund http://www.childrensdefense.org/

ERIC http://www.eric.ed.gov/

Family Violence Prevention Fund (FVPF) http://endabuse.org/

Famous Psychologist: Eric Erickson http://psychology.about.com/blsubist_erik.htm

John Piaget Society http://www.piaget.org/biography/biog.html

Childstudy.net - The Child Development Website http://childstudy.net/

National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC) http://www.naeyc.org

National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) http://www.ed.gov/NCES/Index.html

National Institutes of Health http://www.nih.gov

Sigmund Freud and the Freud Archives http://users.rcn.com/brill/freudarc.html

Vygotsky and Language Acquisition http://www.sk.com.br/sk-vygot.html

Vygotsky Resources http://www.kolar.org/vygotsky/

World Health Organization http://www.who.org

research guides home | library home

 

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