How to Find Education Resources

Library Guides

Education & Music

Help using the Library to find and use resources in Music, Education and Counselling

How to Find Education Resources

Introduction

Education is a very broad term used to describe all aspects of teaching theory and practice, inclusive practice, educational psychology, counselling and even social work, social pedagogy and educational research. The University libraries use the Dewey Decimal Classification scheme (See Wikipedia's Dewey Decimal entry for a quick introduction) to organise books and other materials. Education is at 370, part of social science, located on Floor 6 of The Sir Duncan Rice Library along with the Teaching Resource Collection: How to Find Education Resources (TRC) for teaching practice.

This guide aims to give you a very quick introduction to the various resources available to you. If you would like any further information or help with finding and using resources, please contact the Social Science Subject Team based on Floor 6 of The Sir Duncan Rice Library or the Information Consultant for the School of Education, including Early Years, ITE and TQFE, Claire Molloy, email: c.a.l.molloy@abdn.ac.uk .

New to the Library?

Finding Resources

You can use Primo to find items to read, particularly where you have been given details in a reading list but we have other tools you can use to find even more. Resources such as British Education Index (BEI) (available via EBSCOhost ) provide details of over 300 education and training related journals published in the UK, report and conference literature and working papers. PsycINFO (available via Ovid ) from the American Psychological Association (APA) contains nearly 2.3 million citations and summaries of scholarly journal articles, book chapters, books, and dissertations, all in psychology and related disciplines such as counselling, sociology, education, linguistics, anthropology and others, dating as far back as the 1800s.
A quick guide to both BEI and PsycINFO is available .

Other useful resources include International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS) (available via ProQuest ): produced by the London School of Economics and covers social and cultural anthropology, sociology, education, economics, and the political sciences. It provides access to over 2.5 million references dating back to 1951 and current data is taken from over 2,800 selected journals and around 7000 books per annum. A quick guide to the IBSS is available .

We pay a lot of money for resources such as these and you will have to log in to read anything you find - check out the relevant library guide for details.

Reading smarter and evaluating

Getting as much as you can out of your reading requires focus and evaluation skills. The following are just some tips to help:

Reference Management

You might find it useful to organise the references you have found. There are many different free and 'freemium' resources available to help you with your reference management. Try using Wikipedia's Comparison of reference management software to compare them. The University of Aberdeen currently subscribes to and supports RefWorks .

Questions?

Contact the Information Consultant for the School of Education, including Early Years, ITE, TQFE and Counselling Claire Molloy: c.a.l.molloy@abdn.ac.uk .


Last revised by Claire Molloy, August 2023