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To access library resources off campus, navigate to the Off Campus Access link under the "Using the Library" tag on the library website. Clicking the link will take you to the following screen, where you may log in with your NDUS username and password.

Most research assignments should have a combination of different source types within your research. Books are a great resource for doing research. E-books and physical books both fall into this category.
Books differ from peer-reviewed journal articles because books provide general overviews of a topic, whereas articles are shorter and more specific.
Remember: You don't have to read the entire book! If there is one chapter in the book that works for your topic, just read that chapter.
The link to the library catalog will take you to an advanced search. Use these steps to fill in the search box:

Your results will come up as a list of sources with the ability to save links. Along the right side of the page is a sidebar with more filtering options.

The sidebar is labeled "Tweak your results." Use some or all of the following tips to narrow down your results further:

Finding Scholarly Articles
These articles are basically the "bread-and-butter" sources for scholarly research - they're used in every discipline.
What does peer-reviewed mean?
If an article is peer-reviewed that means that before the article was published it was reviewed and scrutinized by other experts in the same field. This process ensures that the sources are reliable and trustworthy.
Why you should use them:
These source types may also be referred to as peer-reviewed article, academic article, or journal article.
Here are some of the best databases to use for finding scholarly articles in nursing:
Includes more than 26 million citations for biomedical literature from MEDLINE, life science journals, and online books. Citations may include links to full-text content from PubMed Central and the publisher websites.
Free archive of biomedical and life sciences journal literature at the U.S. National Institutes of Health's National Library of Medicine (NIH/NLM).
Offers student researchers, allied health professionals, nurses, and medical educators access to peer-reviewed, full-text scholarly journals, as well as indices and abstracts covering a wide range of medical topics, including pediatric nursing, critical care, nursing ethics, mental health, nursing management, and more.
Bibliographic database covering the fields of biomedical research and clinical sciences, including medicine, nursing, dentistry, veterinary medicine, pharmacy, allied health, and preclinical sciences.
Finding Reference Resources 
Reference resources are great sources to provide you with background information or context for a topic. These resources can be dictionaries, encyclopedias, guides, handbooks, etc.
The best place at the VCSU Library to find reference information is our Credo Reference Database.
One-stop multidisciplinary reference source with information from encyclopedias, dictionaries, atlases, and more. It includes images, videos, audio pronunciations of terms, maps, data tables, quotations, and citations.