Browsing the
collection
When you get familiar with where the main recreation, leisure, and tourism
book materials are located in the library you can always use this knowledge
to your advantage when browsing the collection. For example, if you notice
where the main books on therapeutic recreation are (say under the call number
RM 736.7) you can go to the 5th floor and browse this area (RM 736.7) to see
what other books we may have on therapeutic recreation and related subjects.
Other subject areas important to recreation, leisure, and tourism are as follows:
- G 155 Travel/tourism
- GV 14.45 Leisure (sociological/psychological
aspects)
- GV 174 Leisure
- GV 191.6 Outdoor recreation
- GV 181.5 Leisure and recreation management
- BJ 1498 Leisure (psychology/philosophy)
Journal articles
Using the catalogue to find library materials is the basic search strategy
in any research project once you know what topics you are looking for. The
catalogue lists all library materials in the collection, including books,
videos, maps, government documents and journal or periodical titles that the
library owns.
It is very important that you realize that journals
are listed in the catalogue by title, not by article
title. For example, if you have a reference to an article title
by a particular author in the journal Leisure Studies,
you need to look for the journal first under the title option in the catalogue
(e.g., leisure studies). If the library
had the journal title, then you would check to see which issues were in the
collection, what issue you needed for the article in question, and the location
of the journal on the shelf.
So, how do you find journal articles? You need to
consult indexes, either in book form or in online database form.
Journal indexes/databases
Journal articles are best found by consulting library indexes (or abstracts
if short summaries of the articles are included in the indexes). For a basic
introduction to indexes check the library page on Finding
journal articles on the library home page.
If indexes are available online in electronic format they are referred to
as databases. For a good selection of suggested databases to use in Applied
Health Sciences check the Applied
Health Sciences databases page on the library home page. From this page
the most important databases for recreation, leisure, and tourism topics are
listed in alphabetical order. It is important to read the annotation summaries
under each database to find out what topics are likely to be covered in the
database. For core recreation and leisure subjects, for example,
Sport Discus is probably the first place to look. For aspects of
recreation and leisure that are more health/medical in orientation then
CINAHL PlusText is probably
more relevant. For sociological aspects you should be checking Sociological
Abstracts; for business/marketing, ABI/INFORM
Global ; for education topics, ERIC.
With some experience in using these databases you will quickly get to know
the types of articles that are likely to be found in each.
Don't forget that some of the databases have full-text article available directly
online (check which ones at Full-text
list).
All indexes are not available as online databases. You should remember
that online databases are selective in their coverage of journals and there
is simply not a comprehensive database available that has all the articles
you may need for background material on your topic. For example, a good index
on many social science topics is Leisure, recreation
and tourism abstracts. This is not an online database but it is
easy to use and you could consult it for some good journal article references.
Like most indexes it is published every year and lists articles by topic under
an alphabetical index. The same searching principles apply to this index (and
other book indexes) as in searching online databases except you cannot combine
subjects or keywords together in a search.