Resources for Research Projects
I’m not the most experienced researcher in the world, I’ll admit, so this post may mostly be for my future reference. Hopefully, it’ll help some others.
Government/state websites: If it’s a history project about the US, state websites will usually have links to a local historical site, organizations, or resources that are EXTREMELY valuable, often containing primary sources. e.g. researching about the Civil Rights Movement in Baltimore, Maryland, I went to the state and city website, found a link to the Maryland Historical Society, did some snooping, and found hundreds of primary resources that include old articles, newspaper clippings, and photographs. However, not all sources are digitized, and they only provide a catalogue for the sources. If possible, going to the libraries where the resources are kept would be invaluable. The National Archives, the National Public Radio (include PBS radio stuff), and other similar sites are valuable in finding primary historical sources.
I saw this on another post somewhere and haven’t tried it out yet, but Sci-Hub allows you to access a restricted online journal article by pasting the link or DOI in. Removes the frustration finding a really good abstract of a journal then discovering you can’t access the whole thing.
This sounds weird, but for historical research, the NHD Student Resources page contains at least a hundred links for various topics and resource types, like primary source photographs, videos, oral histories, newspaper, etc. Though mostly only for students researching for NHD, I’m keeping it in mind for future reference.
Google News Archives: In need of some more primary sources or knowledge of current events? Newspapers on this site date back to at least the 1800s in multiple countries around the world. For most years and newspapers after the 1900s, there are daily archives on those papers. Similarly, Google Books also provides archives of old magazines, like Billboard.
It sounds generic, but changing the wording on a Google search can vastly change results. I’m told I’m a good at picking keywords for a Google Search, and while I can’t pinpoint exactly why or the unconcious thought process I have, it also comes with practice. Go from broad to specific, and don’t be afraid to copy-paste nearly word for word the questions in the search bar, because you may be pleasantly surprised that someone made an answer for exactly that. Contrary to others advice, I don’t use or rely on Google Scholar, because I find it almost wholly unuseful to me. It mainly only provides academic journals, which is usually not what I’m looking for. I’m usually better off using the general search bar, which can give me a better variety of primary sources and secondary, like oral histories, radio shows/interviews, PDFs, videos, journals, PhD/Master’s thesis. You could also literally type in the topic and type of source you’re looking for and there may be a webpage or website dedicated to just that, depending on the specificity of the topic.
Going to a Wikipedia entry, going down to the links and sources and the bottom, clicking on them, and seeing where they take me.
Carrot2: It’s a visual clustering engine that sorts your search results into smaller topics. Though the websites found there aren’t particularly extraordinary or unfindable through a normal Google Search, it does help sift through the possible doorways your topic could lead you.
Check local/school libraries for books pertaining to your topic. But also, check if the library provides exclusive access to some research sites like EBSCO, JSTOR, or Questia.
Again for historical research, find fictionalizations of the event or in the time period you’re researching about. e.g. I was researching about Indonesian society during Dutch colonization, so I read Earth of Mankind by Pramoedya Toer which was set in the time period and provided countless details of social customs and hierarchy in that period. Although, be careful of creative liberties the author takes. Toer lived through the time period, and the book is labelled an Indonesian classic, so I wasn’t too concerned with that.