Posts tagged proxy

Google + Library for scholarly sources

8 April 2009 | Filed under: comm111, ejournals, ENGR111, Google, Google Scholar, proxy

Don't let Google Scholar lead you astray!

Google Scholar is a great place to scan across a lot of sources at once, but if it doesn't know that you have rights to access online articles and other sources from a library, it might send you to a page like this - which asks you to pay for the article you want:

 

Science magazine's "pay per view" page, accessed from Google Scholar

 

The journal in this example is in the OSU Libraries' collection, and OSU students, staff and faculty have the right to access it (and articles in lots of other journals) from any computer with an Internet connection.  With a few adjustments to your preferences, you can tell Google Scholar to point you to the resources that the library provides for the OSU community.

 

Start your search in Google Scholar (google.scholar.com).  A typical results screen looks like this one.  The first result on this list is the one that led to the pay-per-view screen example above.

 

A set of Google Scholar results, with no changes to the default preferences

 

To find out which of your results are available from the OSU Libraries, go to the Scholar Preferences link, just to the right of the search box:

 

Location of the Scholar Preferences link

 

In the middle of the Scholar Preferences page, there is a section called Library Links.  Students, faculty and staff at OSU should search for Oregon State because they can access content from OSU online.

 

OSU options on the Google Scholar preferences list

 

Click the boxes next to both OSU options:  Find it at OSU, and Get This Item at OSU.

 

Now, when you do a search, your result list will look like this.  Notice the new links to the right of each title:

 

Google Scholar results, after preferences set to find things in the OSU Libraries' collection

 

There are also some new options like Get This Item at OSU, or Get This in Print at OSU in the list of links at the bottom of each entry on the result list.

Clicking on these new links will now take you to the library's collections.  If you are in the library, or at an IP address recognized as an OSU address, this process will be immediate.  If you are not on campus, you will need to prove that you have access to the sources the library has paid for.  You do this by entering your ONID login and password at this screen:

 

OSU Libraries proxy login screen

 

This process works well, but it doesn't work perfectly.  If there is an article you want, and you can't get it this way, ask a librarian how you can get it.

Good luck!  If you have questions, contact me or leave a comment.

 

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