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Social Work: Getting Started

Libguide for the School of Social Work

Welcome

Welcome to the subject research guide on Social Work! This guide provides resources for students and faculty on some of the basic resources and tools available and how they relate to Social work as a field of research. Feel free to use the tabs at the top of the guide to find information on books, articles, websites and more on social work.

Types of Resources

Databases are critical sources of information in the digital world. They function as large digital collections, often based on a specific field of research, that can be searched and accessed fully online. Some databases contain full texts of articles that you can access online, while others contain only abstracts of papers or a combination of both. If you find a citation for a helpful resource in a database but it does not provide access to the full text, consult with a librarian about the best ways of obtaining access. 

 

The Earl S. Richardson library subscribes to hundreds of these databases for the benefit of our patrons. Navigate to the link below to see the full list. You can sort by database Name or by Subject to ensure you are searching the database that best suits your needs. 

Scholarly journal articles are in depth dives into specific academic topics. They are typically peer reviewed and have a longer publishing cycle than many other materials. These sources are the bread and butter of academic writing. However because of their highly specific nature it is rare to find an article that covers your research question completely and exactly. When consulting journal articles, expect to need to compare many articles that work on similar topics in order to paint a complete picture or a topic. Search for scholarly journal articles on our library homepage's OneSearch, on Google Scholar, or in specific library databases.

If you need a resource that takes a deep dive into a specific topic, books may be what you are after. The time to publication for books is longer than that of Journal articles, as well as allowing for more length. On average, a book will give you a greater in depth examination of a topic, at the tradeoff of potentially being less cutting edge than article research. However this more comprehensive scope does not mean that you should only consult a singular source: a book may cover a topic in full, but it is only one perspective. Always compare and contrast several sources in order to fully comprehend your research question and the dialog that surrounds it. On topics that don't experience much change over time, such as History, books can be especially powerful resources.

The ERS Library hold thousands of books in its own stacks, but as a Morgan State affiliate, you are also able to request books from any university library within the University of Maryland System. If you still cannot find the title you are after, consider placing an Interlibrary Loan request to get books that are held in libraries all over the globe.

eBooks are much like traditional books in terms of scope and publication criteria, so in many cases you will want to use them for similar research needs. They are held in digital format by libraries, often with copyright license agreements that track the number of uses. For this reason, it is more difficult to obtain eBooks that are not held natively by your institution. Search MSU's eBook collection at the link below:

Social Work Databases

If you're finding too many sources, or sources that are not specific enough, try one of these databases that contain articles related to social work and the social sciences:

Organizations and Groups

Subject Guide

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Renise Johnson
Contact:
Earl S. Richardson Library
Room 130
Circulation Department
renise.johnson@morgan.edu
(443) 885-1723

Research Integrity

According to the Council of Social Work Education (CSWE) Social Work Researchers should:

  1. Work to protect the people and communities of whom they study
  2. Ethically and effectively participate in mentoring relationships crucial to scientific activity
  3. Manage apparent and implicit conflicts of interest and commitment
  4. Collaborate ethically with researchers from other professions and disciplines
  5. Ensure that research data issues are managed properly
  6. Employ responsible publication and authorship practices
  7. Responsibly conduct and contribute to the peer-review process
  8. Understand and prevent research misconduct

View full CSWE Statement below:

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