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Click on the arrow
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pages of content:
1:
2:
- 2.1
- 2.2
- 2.3
- 2.4
- 2.5
- 2.6
- 2.7
- 2.8
- 2.9
- 2.10
- 2.11
- 2.12
- 2.13
- 2.14
- 2.15
- 2.16
3:
- 3.1
- 3.2
- 3.3
- 3.4
- 3.5
- 3.6
- 3.7
- 3.8
- 3.9
- 3.10
- 3.11
- 3.12
- 3.13
- 3.14
- 3.15
- 3.16
- 3.17
4:
- 4.1
- 4.2
- 4.3
- 4.4
- 4.5
- 4.6
- 4.7
- 4.8
- 4.9
- 4.10
- 4.11
- 4.12
- 4.13
- 4.14
- 4.15
5:
- 5.1
- 5.2
- 5.3
- 5.4
- 5.5
- 5.6
- 5.7
- 5.8
- 5.9
- 5.10
- 5.11
- 5.12
- 5.13
- 5.14
- 5.15
- 5.16
6:
- 6.1
- 6.2
- 6.3
- 6.4
- 6.5
- 6.6
- 6.7
- 6.8
- 6.9
- 6.10
- 6.11
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- 6.13
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- 6.20
- 6.21
- 6.22
- 6.24
- 6.25
- 6.26
- 6.27
- 6.28
- 6.29
- 6.30
7:
- 7.1
- 7.2
- 7.3
- 7.4
- 7.5
- 7.6
- 7.7
- 7.8
- 7.9
- 7.10
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- 7.13
- 7.14
- 7.15
- 7.16
- 7.17
- 7.18
8:
- 8.1
- 8.2
- 8.3
- 8.4
- 8.5
- 8.6
- 8.7
- 8.8
- 8.9
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TALON MODULE 3: Finding Background Information
Handbooks, Manuals and Guides to a Field of
Study
Handbooks, manuals,
and guides to a field of study provide a
detailed overview of or a general
introduction to a subject area. The distinctions between these three
types of materials are very fine; in general, handbooks are similar to encyclopedias
only with more in-depth entries, manuals provide instruction on how to do something,
and guides to a field of study are designed to teach researchers or students
about the sources and research methodology in the field. Most of the materials
that fall into one of these categories have attributes that qualify them in
the other two.
Some examples of these include:
- Chicago Manual of Style
- The Chilton's series of automotive repair manuals
- CRC Handbook of Laboratory Safety
- Guide to Graduate Business Schools
- How Stuff Works
- Occupational Outlook Handbook
- Scientific American Science Desk Reference
- Student Sociologist's Handbook
- A Student's Guide to the Study of History
- The Way Things Work
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