Start to build a search strategy by determining search terms. Search terms or keywords can be people, events, theories, concepts, ideas, periods, movements, eras, places, techniques, media etc. Use terms that describe the concepts in the research question and their synonyms. You can consult a reference text, such as an encyclopedia, for additional background information and to identify additional terms. You can also look at the "subjects" listed in the "details" section of your Search@UW results for additional terms to try. You may have to test a few terms to see which terms retrieve the most relevant results.
For example, if you are interested in researching works created under the Federal Art Project, in addition to "Federal Art Project" some additional key words might be "Works Progress Administration", "New Deal", and "Great Depression."
AND includes both terms
Example: "Federal art project" AND "graphic design"
OR includes either term
Example: "Federal art project" OR "graphic design"
NOT excludes term*
Example: "Federal art project" NOT "graphic design"
*Note that NOT may exclude results with the term even if a result contains a search term you want included
Using database syntax can help you refine your search. For example using "double quotations" will narrow searches by searching only for that specific phrase rather than each individual term. Using truncation (*) or wildcard (?) can expand your search by expanding the scope of a single term. Note the wildcard (?) symbol doesn't work in Search@UW.
Symbol | Use | Function | Example |
"..." | Double quotation marks | Searches exact phrase | "Federal Art Project" |
* | truncation | Adds none or more characters | art* searches art, arts, artist, artists, artistic, artesan, artful [but also articulate, article, etc] |
Different database platforms (i.e. EBSCO, ProQuest) may use different syntax. Review a more complete list of database syntax.
A search strategy (or search string) are the keywords, terms, and syntax used in your search. A typical search strategy includes 2-4 concepts, but may include more keywords.
For example, an initial search for information on female artists who participated in the federal arts project might be:
"federal art project" AND women
But you may want to expand your search to get results on artists in the Federal Art Project and all associated programs, but also narrow results to only female graphic artists. So instead you might try:
("federal art project" OR "works progress administration" OR "new deal") AND (female OR wom?n) AND (design OR art*)