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EndNote Desktop X7 for Windows PC Lesson 11 - 16 (zip files for Moodle)
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC-SA
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This is part 3 of a series of online exercises designed to demonstrate and allow students to practice what we consider the most useful, general functions of desktop EndNote for Windows. The online lessons and descriptive titles can be found in the Resources section, on the right side of your screen.Part 3 is concerned with using Cite While You Write (EndNote's plugin for Word) to place in-text citations into a Word document, change the referencing style to suit the student and build and edit the bibliography.Each lesson contains:general instructions describing what the student can expect to seespecific learning objectivesa main menu screen allowing them to choose between the demonstration and the practice exercisethe demonstration's duration timeThe demonstration part of each lesson:is narrated by the authoris not interactive includes text captionsThe practice part of each lesson:is not narrated contains more limited text prompts in place of detailed instructionsis interactiveThese lessons were created using Adobe Captivate 9 and published in HTML5 format, designed to be dropped into Moodle and used as HTML files. No grading or progress tracking is included in these lessons.They can be seen in action on KEATS (keats.kcl.ac.uk), the bespoke version of Moodle in use at King's College London. KEATS is not public, so please contact the authors for guest access or furher information regarding these lessons.

Subject:
Higher Education
Information Science
Material Type:
Module
Author:
John Woodcock
Date Added:
02/28/2017
EndNote Desktop X7 for Windows PC Lessons 1 - 4 (Zip files for Moodle)
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC-SA
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This is part 1 of a series of online exercises designed to demonstrate and allow students to practice what we consider the most useful, general functions of desktop EndNote for Windows. The online lessons and descriptive titles can be found in the Resources section, on the right side of your screen.Part 1 is focused on starting a new reference library and adding references from commonly used academic databases like OvidSP and CINAHL.Each lesson contains:general instructions describing what the student can expect to seespecific learning objectivesa main menu screen allowing them to choose between the demonstration and the practice exercisethe demonstration's duration timeThe demonstration part of each lesson:is narrated by the authoris not interactive includes text captionsThe practice part of each lesson:is not narrated contains more limited text prompts in place of detailed instructionsis interactiveThese lessons were created using Adobe Captivate 9 and published in HTML5 format, designed to be dropped into Moodle and used as HTML files. No grading or progress tracking is included in these lessons.They can be seen in action on KEATS (keats.kcl.ac.uk), the bespoke version of Moodle in use at King's College London. KEATS is not public, so please contact the authors for guest access or furher information regarding these lessons.

Subject:
Higher Education
Information Science
Material Type:
Module
Author:
John Woodcock
Date Added:
02/28/2017
EndNote Desktop X7 for Windows PC Lessons 5 - 10 (zip files for Moodle)
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC-SA
Rating
0.0 stars

This is part 2 of a series of online exercises designed to demonstrate and allow students to practice what we consider the most useful, general functions of desktop EndNote for Windows. The online lessons and descriptive titles can be found in the Resources section, on the right side of your screen.Part 2 is concerned with adding references that come from non-database sources such as books (from a library catalogue) and webpages, what to do if your references are missing information and how to have EndNote find and attach journal article PDFs to your references. Each lesson contains:general instructions describing what the student can expect to seespecific learning objectivesa main menu screen allowing them to choose between the demonstration and the practice exercisethe demonstration's duration timeThe demonstration part of each lesson:is narrated by the authoris not interactive includes text captionsThe practice part of each lesson:is not narrated contains more limited text prompts in place of detailed instructionsis interactiveThese lessons were created using Adobe Captivate 9 and published in HTML5 format, designed to be dropped into Moodle and used as HTML files. No grading or progress tracking is included in these lessons.They can be seen in action on KEATS (keats.kcl.ac.uk), the bespoke version of Moodle in use at King's College London. KEATS is not public, so please contact the authors for guest access or furher information regarding these lessons.

Subject:
Higher Education
Information Science
Material Type:
Module
Author:
John Woodcock
Date Added:
02/28/2017
EndNote/PRISMA: EndNote for Systematic Reviews
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-SA
Rating
0.0 stars

Based on James Cook University Library's Endnote and PRISMA video (CC BY-SA licence), this learning object is a brief video, a document with the codes and formulas, and a downloadable EndNote library with the PRISMA groups set-up

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Health, Medicine and Nursing
Information Science
Material Type:
Interactive
Author:
University of New England
Date Added:
04/11/2022