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Medical Laboratory Technology (MLT): Gather your sources

Quick guide for resources for MLT students.

Scholarly Journals

Questions for scholary research

  • Usually written by professors, researchers, or experts in the field
  • Written for other scholars and professionals
  • Have a bibliography or list of references
  • Use technical language of the specialized field
  • Is peer-reviewed

You can easily find scholarly sources in the M.P. Baker Library Databases.

A database is like a digital file cabinet that can be locked to allow only certain people access. It is well organized to allow people to locate information quickly by using sophisticated search and browsing tools. Plus, the information is high-quality – it has been selected by professionals and reviewed for accuracy. Many databases also provide access to cool perks like generated citations!

The Internet is like a digital bulletin board that is open to anyone and everyone to post or review. The digital bulletin board is extremely disorganized because it does not have an efficient, standard organizational system. Additionally, the information has not been selected for quality or reviewed for accuracy; in fact, anyone can post whatever they like. You also have to deal with hassles like annoying advertisements. 

Journals are published by professional organizations. The information in journals is often referred to as "peer-reviewed". That is because the professional organization publishing the journal is made up of peers that review each others research before allowing it to be published. When someone writes an article for a journal, they must provide their research information, statistics, sources, and other information to support what they have written. The author is held accountable for what is written. The information must be factual and accurate to the best of the writer's knowledge and peers from the professional organization must be in agreement with the information before it can be published. By comparison, anyone can submit articles to a newspaper or magazine with little accountability for the information provided.

Search engines are great for gleaning information from the Internet. However, they are companies in business for profit. Remember they are more concerned with which contributors paid them the most money to make sure certain pages appear first in a result list than they are about you finding authoritative information. They bring you the results and expect you to be discerning enough to select authoritative information.  You can, however, use Google Scholar as a more narrowed path to scholarly articles on the internet. 

An authoritative website is one that is usually created and maintained by a professional organization, a research institution, or government agencies. Therefore, most authoritative websites end with the extensions .gov, .org, .edu. However, some authoritative websites do have .com extensions. In order for a website to be considered authoritative, it should provide contact information for the person creating and maintaining the site as well as a current copyright date. It should also provide information about the person or organization that assumes responsibility and accountability for the information provided on the site. Most authoritative sites will also include a physical address and phone number. If you can not find out who provides the information for the site, the credentials of the person providing the information, or contact information you should be leary of using the site for research purposes even if the word "official" is used on the site name.

Can't find what you're looking for?

You can always request an item through Interlibrary Loan.

  • Please give item 2-3 weeks to come in.
  • We are unable to request textbooks or supplemental course books.  
  • As the user of the requested item(s) you assume sole responsibility of any copyright clearance fees that may be incurred. 
  • A late fee of $1.00 per day is charged for each overdue item. 

Access the ILL request form

Subject Databases

Books

You may use the online catalog to search for print and electronic books relating to your topic. Type the subject into the search box and click the "Search" button. The result list will provide the call number and location of the item(s) found. If the item is an electronic resource, the URL for the item will also be provided.

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