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Browzine logo with transparent background
Browzine logo with transparent background












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By introducing students to BrowZine, which only accesses academic journals, they can only get scholarly content. Should I use BrowZine with students?Ī common complaint from faculty is that students are not selecting appropriate sources. You can also save citations to tools like Zotero, RefWorks, Dropbox, and Mendeley to help keep all of your information together in one place. By doing so, you will get alerts when a new issue of a journal is published and be able to save articles to read later, even when you are offline. Set up a personal account so you can create a personal library and save up to 64 journal titles to your bookshelf. For example, a search for “criminal justice” will retrieve both subject category results and journal title results. A blue book icon indicates that the result is for the title of a specific journal. A red file icon indicates that this result is for a subject category. Be sure to pay attention to the accompanying icon for a particular result. Once you begin typing in the search box, a list of results will begin populating. You can search for journals by title, subject, or ISSN. Select the John Jay College library on the “Settings” page and then enter your John Jay user name and password-the same that you use for your John Jay email.

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For the app version, download the mobile app on your iPhone, iPad, and Android devices. Alternatively, you can go to the Browse journals by subject link under Journal titles on the library website. To access the web version of BrowZine, you can go directly to. The app version focuses exclusively on the approximately 15,000 academic e-journals that have an ISSN or eISSN number, and is great for tracking and reading your favorite journals on the go from your phone or tablet. The web version also shows the impact factor for the different journals. The web version provides access to more content because it provides extra links to content through the Library website. All platforms allow you to view complete issues of e-journals that the Library subscribes to, dating back to 2005, including the table of contents. It has been compared to Flipster, an app for browsing popular magazines (available remotely to all NYPL library card holders), but for academic journals.īrowZine has a web version and mobile apps. BrowZine operates in a web environment but it uses journal covers and journal page images that have the look and feel of a bookshelf. In BrowZine, you can find any academic e-journal title that the Library subscribes to that has an ISSN or eISSN number. and context matters!īrowZine allows you to access and browse over 15,000 academic e-journals, much like you might browse their print counterparts.

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We think this is a good thing, since every year students and faculty at John Jay download the full text of about 1 million journal articles. Our speed-of-light, get-it-anywhere-anytime-online delivery methods provide access to these articles, often as an easy-to-access PDF-but without the context of the journal issue.īrowZine, the Library’s newest tool for browsing journals, is trying to change this. Much to the chagrin of journal editors, most of these journal articles are discovered as the result of keyword searches in databases, without any links to the journal issue. In other words, opportunities to cozy up with your favorite academic journal are fleeting. You would also discover that despite the abundance of these journals in the scholarly literature landscape, the vast majority of them are now only available electronically through libraries. If you did, one of the first things you would discover is that the majority of library databases provide access to scholarly journals-those peer reviewed, academic journals that are often required sources for papers and research projects, particularly in upper level courses and graduate work. When you want library resources, do you typically think about looking for them in databases? Do you search the CUNY+ catalog for a book? Explore the Library’s growing streaming video collections by going to Films on Demand or one of the Alexander Street video databases? Or do you just head directly to a favorite database like JSTOR, PsycINFO, Project Muse or Google Scholar?Ĭhances are that you have your list of go-to sources and have not thought much about library databases on a more macro-level.














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