Chicago Style Citations Basics - 1

You have to cite using the Chicago Style for your upcoming paper. Do not panic! After this session, you will be able to format basic in-text citations and bibliography entries.

Learning outcomes: 

  • differentiate between the Author-Date and Notes-Bibliography formats
  • compare and contrast the roles of the Notes to the role of the Bibliography
  • prepare the first and subsequent in-text citations using both formats
  • create bibliography entries

Citation Management - 2

A hands-on session during which participants create an account in at least one citation manager (EndNote Web, RefWorks, Zotero, or Mendeley), and import references from the catalogue and at least one database, then create a basic bibliography.

Learning outcomes: 

Citation Management - 1

A hands-on session during which participants create an account in at least one citation manager (EndNote Web, RefWorks, Zotero, or Mendeley), and import references from the catalogue and at least one database, then create a basic bibliography.

Learning outcomes: 

Scrape Twitter Data with TWARC

Does your research require you to build an archive of Twitter data? In this workshop attendees will learn how to scrape tweets with the TWARC program in your command line interface without going through the tedious process of manually downloading tweets. Attendees will also be guided through the process of cleaning up Twitter data once it’s downloaded.

Identifiers and Impact: Using ORCiD and Your Research Impact

Researcher identifiers are a simple and convenient way to ensure your work is searchable, properly cited, and can help you analyse your research impact.  In this workshop, learn about what researcher identifiers are, the benefits of having one, and how having one can impact your current and future research.   Attendees will also be guided through the process of signing up for an ORCiD account.

Library 101: Introduction to LibrarySearch - 17

The University of Toronto Libraries has introduced a new search system called LibrarySearch. Join us to learn how to discover books, e-books, journal articles, and more for your research, teaching, and learning. Participants will learn how to navigate the new search interface including how to use new features to access full text, to create citations, and to save your searches, and how to use advanced searching features like Boolean operators. 

Library 101: Introduction to LibrarySearch - 16

The University of Toronto Libraries has introduced a new search system called LibrarySearch. Join us to learn how to discover books, e-books, journal articles, and more for your research, teaching, and learning. Participants will learn how to navigate the new search interface including how to use new features to access full text, to create citations, and to save your searches, and how to use advanced searching features like Boolean operators.