Answered By: Colin Magee
Last Updated: Jun 20, 2023     Views: 219

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contact mcclibrary@kctcs.edu for immediate assistance


VIDEO TUTORIAL:


WHAT IT IS:
The Gale In Context: Global Issues database is a small research database geared towards articles and viewpoints on global issues.

WHAT IT DOES:
Gale In Context: Global Issues specializes in popular information on global topics.  Use it to find:
-Viewpoints and fact-supported arguments on topics that are global
-Magazine articles
-News articles

 

HOW TO SEARCH:

Use the search box to conduct a basic search.  You can also access a list of over 200 leading global topics by clicking “Browse Issues” below the search box.  Each topic has a built in results page showing you selected articles on that topic.

Tips: Use “Or,” “And,” and “Not” to get different results.
School OR violence will get you all results containing “school” or “violence.”  More results.
School AND violence will get you all results containing “school” and “violence.”  Fewer results.
School NOT violence will get you all results containing “school” WITHOUT “violence.” Even fewer results.
“School violence” in quotation marks will treat your search as a phrase – both words together.

 

SEARCH RESULTS:

Search results in the Gale In Context databases are sorted by document type and then by relevance.  The database will always look for viewpoint articles first and put those at the top of your search results.  You can further limit your search results by selecting a different facet on the right side:
Document type:
By default, everything is already sorted by document type automatically in Gale In Context.  But you can select which specific publication type/source type you want in your search results: newspapers, magazines, scholarly journals, etc.

Publication date:
Choose a range of dates for your search results.  For example, you can show results published from the last 12 months, last 5 years, last 10 years, etc. 

Subjects:
Each article in the database has been “tagged” with different subject headings.  For example, an article about a recent school shooting might be tagged with “school violence,” “school shooting,” “school bullying,” etc.  You can click relevant subjects and that will pull out all the articles from your search results that are tagged with that specific subject heading.

 

READING AN ARTICLE

Clicking on an article will open it in either Full-text, or PDF (using Adobe Reader).  At the top right, you can send the article through email, download it to your computer, or print the article.  Click on “Cite” to access your bibliographic citation for the article.  You would cite the article using MLA if it is for English 101 or English 102, and you would cite the article using APA for other classes.

 

Click here for additional product support:
https://assets.cengage.com/gale/docs/training/GIC_ResourceGuide.pdf

If you need help, contact the library at mcclibrary@kctcs.edu.

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