
E-book and audiobook platform, including both fiction and non-fiction. Sign in using your M# to access functionality such as placing holds, renewing titles, and adding titles to a wish list. Titles may also be accessed on mobile devices by downloading the free Boundless app.
Educational, multidisciplinary streaming videos on a wide range of subjects from academic to life-skills content. Particularly strong in the social sciences and humanities.
MC Library has access to different kinds of search tools:
MC students, faculty, and staff can access all of our search tools and online resources from on- or off-campus.
Unlike Google, library databases can't understand an entire sentence. You'll need to break your topic down into the most important ideas: the keywords. Keywords are individual words or short phrases that represent the main ideas in your topic, thesis, or research question.
Example Question: Should the federal government be able to regulate content on the internet?
Keywords: federal government, regulate, content, internet
After you've identified your main ideas and some keywords to start with, think of additional search terms for each concept. These can be synonyms, related ideas, broader terms, or narrower terms. Since a database will match only what you type, using different terms for similar ideas can help you find more articles.
Example Search Terms:
Click on the research issue you're having below to see tips for addressing it:
I'm Not Finding Enough Sources
I'm Finding Irrelevant Sources
None of These Tips Solved My Research Issue



If the options above did not help you find useful results, you may want to:
After you've selected your search tool, identified keywords, and fixed research issues, it's time to choose your sources. It is common to get more search results than you will use, so you must evaluate the sources you find to choose the best ones for your research.
Start by scanning the search results to locate sources that fit your research question or need. The search results page will include information about each source, such as the title, year, and abstract, to help you determine its relevance.
Once you've found a source you'd like to use, evaluate its credibility by considering the evidence, source, context, audience, purpose, and execution of the source. Learn more on the Evaluate Information and Fake News guide linked below.
MC Library's research guides are built by MC librarians to help students use library resources for a wide variety of academic subjects. The research guides linked below may be helpful to you if you would like to learn more about [topic of guide].
Want to learn more? View our other events and special topics guides: