Google Scholar can be a helpful tool for broad searching and for locating related documents to materials that you already have. In addition to being able to search an enormous volume of resources, Google Scholar can also help you organize your documents with its "My library" function that stores links to your favorite articles.
While Google Scholar can be helpful because it is able to search across such a large volume of materials, remember that running a detailed search in a subject specific database may help you identify higher quality materials even if there is a lower quantity of results. The best practice is to use all of the tools available to you: run searches in the library catalog, Worldcat Discovery, subject specific databases, and Google Scholar. By using all of these tools, you can discover more resources and practice your skills at developing strong search strings to return quality results.
You can search for resources on Google Scholar without an account, but you will need to have a Google account if you want to store your materials in your Google Scholar library.
Click "SIGN IN" in the upper right hand corner of the page to login with an existing Google account or create a new one using the prompts.
Note: If you do not want to use an existing account or your personal Google account, you can create a new one and select "Use your existing email address" then enter your NSU email address to create and verify the new account. This also prevents you from creating a new Gmail address when setting up a Google account. Learn more directly from Google here: Create a Google Account
Running a basic search in Google Scholar is essentially the same as your standard Google search. The major difference is that Google Scholar will only return results for scholarly literature (books, papers, articles, etc.) instead of websites from across the internet.
To run a basic search, enter your relevant search terms and hit enter/return or click the magnifying glass button.
Using the Advanced Search features of Google Scholar, you can restrict your search to specific words, phrases, authors, publications, and publishing timeframes.
To access the advanced search menu, click the three-lined "hamburger" menu in the upper left corner of the Google Scholar search page. From the menu, select Advanced Search:
Now that you have launched the Advanced Search pop-up window, you can limit your results by utilizing one or more of the fields provided:
With all the words:
With the exact phrase:
With at least one of the words:
Without these words:
Note that the Advanced Search tool does not respond to the "Articles" / "Case law" button selection that you choose under the search box on the homepage. This means that by default, advanced searches will return scholarly article results. However, after running a search in either "Articles" or "Case law" mode, Google Scholar's advanced search tool will change to the mode most recently used.
What this means is that if you use the advanced search tool from the home page, you will get scholarly article results even if you had selected the "Case law" toggle on the homepage before opening the advanced search tool. However, if you run a search from the homepage with the "Case law" toggle selected and then open the advanced search tool from your results page (or if you return to the homepage), your advanced search results will now show up as case law searches. To get the advanced search to switch back to article search, run a search in article mode or switch modes in the results page as shown in the box below.
In addition to searching for academic literature, Google Scholar can be used to search for case law across US state and federal courts.
From the homepage, use the toggle button below the search bar to select "Case law" and start a fresh. If desired, select one of the suggested jurisdictions or click "Select courts" to open a full menu of available jurisdictions to limit your search to specific courts.
Homepage:
"Select courts" menu:
Note that the Advanced Search tool does not respond to the "Articles" / "Case law" button selection that you choose under the search box on the homepage. This means that by default, advanced searches will return scholarly article results. However, after running a search in either "Articles" or "Case law" mode, Google Scholar's advanced search tool will change to the mode most recently used.
What this means is that if you use the advanced search tool from the home page, you will get scholarly article results even if you had selected the "Case law" toggle on the homepage before opening the advanced search tool. However, if you run a search from the homepage with the "Case law" toggle selected and then open the advanced search tool from your results page (or if you return to the homepage), your advanced search results will now show up as case law searches. To get the advanced search to switch back to article search, run a search in article mode or switch modes in the results page as shown in the box below.
Google Scholar offers a basic help page that provides information on setting up accounts, searching, and information about how results are presented. You can access the help page by clicking help in the bottom right-hand corner of any Google Scholar page or click here: Google Scholar - Search Help
If you have additional questions, please contact us and a librarian will be happy to assist you:
Phone: 757 823-2418
Email: library@nsu.edu
SMS: 757 230-2015
Chat: New Chat
Both the Basic and Advanced search in Google Scholar will return the same type of results list or scholarly literature including articles, books, etc.
By default, the results list will be sorted by relevance (how accurately the item matches your search terms), will include articles published any time, will return all resource types, and will include citations (these are results that are referred to in other scholarly documents, but no links were found by Google's indexing robots to match the record).
In addition to providing a link to each document in the results list, Google Scholar provides several additional helpful tools below the individual listing: "Save", "Cite", "Cited by", "Related Articles", and "All _ versions".
In addition to the tools above you may see double arrows below a results list entry ">>". After clicking the double arrows, an option labelled "Find it! @ NSU" or "Library Search" may appear. These tools are in the process of being updated and may not work fully. Instead of using these links, please copy and paste the item title or other bibliographic information into the Lyman Beecher Brooks Library search fields on the library website: Lyman Beecher Brooks Library at Norfolk State University (nsu.edu)
Both the Basic and Advanced search in Google Scholar will return the same type of results list or scholarly literature including articles, books, etc.
By default, the results list will be sorted by relevance (how accurately the item matches your search terms), will include articles published any time, will return all resource types, and will include citations (these are results that are referred to in other scholarly documents, but no links were found by Google's indexing robots to match the record).
Full text results are available for any results with a linked title. On the full text page, you can toggle between "Read" and "How cited" modes to view the full text or a synopsis of how citing cases have treated the document. Learn more about the "How cited" feature below.
If there is no full text available in Google Scholar, the case will start with [CITATION] to indicate that only the citation was indexed. If you would like to locate the full text of a case that is only listed as a citation in Google Scholar, contact the library for assistance with requesting the item through interlibrary loan or at a law library.
In addition to providing a link to each document in the results list, Google Scholar provides several additional helpful tools below the individual listing: "Save", "Cite", "Cited by", "How cited", and "All _ versions".
In both article search and case law search, the results list can be filtered using the menu on the left side of the page.
Articles:
Case law:
Do you need to review materials from case law and scholarly literature, but don't want to re write your search over and over?
Google Scholar makes is easy to switch between article and case law results pages for your terms by using the menu in the top left corner of the page and selecting "Articles" or "Case law"!
Google Scholar offers a basic help page that provides information on setting up accounts, searching, and information about how results are presented. You can access the help page by clicking help in the bottom right-hand corner of any Google Scholar page or click here: Google Scholar - Search Help
If you have additional questions, please contact us and a librarian will be happy to assist you:
Phone: 757 823-2418
Email: library@nsu.edu
SMS: 757 230-2015
Chat: New Chat
1. The first step to narrowing your search in Google Scholar to a specific journal is to identify the name of the journal that you would like to search. This is best done from: a search result page from a known article, a publication listing in a database (as shown below), or from the publisher's own page for the journal.
2. Next, you will need to open the Advanced Search tool in Google Scholar:
To access the advanced search menu, click the three-lined "hamburger" menu in the upper left corner of the Google Scholar search page. From the menu, select Advanced Search:
3. Enter the title of the journal that you would like to search within in the "Return articles published in" field:
4. You can now enter your search terms in the top four fields of the Advanced Search tool and your results will be limited to only articles published within that journal as shown in the following example:
The Google Scholar Advanced search tool with the words "child" and "development" in the "with all of the words" field and "American Psychologist" in the "Return articles published in" field.