Imagine that you are a teenager and have cancer. You undergo a year of chemotherapy and after a brief return to normal life, you have a relapse. Your physician says that chemotherapy and radiation therapy could be tried, but a bone marrow transplant (BMT) is your only chance of a real cure. He tells you and your parents that you could die as a result of complications from the transplant, but without it you would only be expected to live one year. You and your family discuss the alternatives and decide to have the transplant. You ask what will happen if the BMT fails, but both your physician and your family tell you that right now you must fight to get better and not think negative thoughts. You do not ask any more questions.
Is there a philosophy that grounds the teaching of advanced legal research (AIR)? Can a coherent identi~y be found? The authors draw upon the experience of twen~y-jive years of teaching AIR to large numbers of students to puzzle this question out. Are we teaching a mechanical skill? Are we offering a course in jurisprudence? Are we sim#y forcing the students to teach themselves? Has the information revolution changed the whole enterprise? Basing the discussion on the context of legal information, the students, and the law, the authors try to find an answer to these fundamental questions. KEYWORDS teaching legal research, teaching, advanced legal research THE SETUP Writing an article that sets forth a philosophy of teaching Advanced Legal Research (ALR) is a presumptuous exercise. Articulating a philosophy of law librarianship itself has been enough of a challenge. 2 At least the field of law librarianship has the ethos of a profession with its own professional association that grapples with standards and issues of identity. While there is a rich literature about teaching legal research, complete with a healthy subset of writings about teaching ALR, 3 there is no developed professional cohort. There is no center to the enterprise. Each person who offers a course in ALR may have her own ideas and concepts as to what she is doing. In this age of empirical research, we would not presume to venture a guess as to what others think they are doing when they teach an ALR course without the use of a well-designed survey instrument.
RNdex Top 100, a value-added database providing citations and abstracts for more than 100 of the leading nursing journals, is one of the first products specifically developed for electronic searching published by SilverPlatter Information, Inc. To provide focused access to the literature, a new 9,000-term thesaurus reflecting the current terminology of the nursing profession is used. Abstracts for each record, new field descriptors, and rapid indexing are some of the features which make this database a viable alternative or supplement to CINAHL.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.