Horticulture
Articles and Databases
Full-text for scholarly sources in the humanities. Including feature articles, interviews, obituaries, bibliographies, original works of fiction, book reviews, and reviews of ballets, dance programs, motion pictures, musicals, operas, plays, and much more. Articles from peer-reviewed journals, newspapers, and magazines useful for many subjects. A great place to get started with research.
Alexander Street Videos (AVON)
Articles from peer-reviewed journals, newspapers, and magazines useful for many subjects. A great place to get started with research. Educational films on a wide range of topics. Includes options to view films in short segments and read transcripts.
A comprehensive database providing full-text articles, indexing, and abstracts from over 500 key scientific journals in biology, agriculture, and related sciences. An essential tool for research in botany, zoology, ecology, and environmental science.
Britannica Academic External link
Topic overviews, including biographies, articles, and media. Covers a wide range of
subjects.
Articles from academic journals in a range of subjects, including criminal justice, law, sociology, social work, psychology, urban studies, and more.
formerly (LexisNexis Academic) is a comprehensive, user-friendly digital research platform providing access to over 17,000 curated news, business, and legal sources. It offers full-text, up-to-date content.
A Greenley Library research guide for accessing newspaper articles
Articles from academic journals, trade publications, and magazines across many subjects.
ScienceDirect hosts over 3,800 journals and more than 37,000 books—over 15 million peer-reviewed publications (and growing) from Elsevier, our imprints and our society partners.
Tool for researching quantitative data, statistics and related information.
Books
Textbooks
Search for textbooks by course number via this list of textbooks on reserve. Also search by title in the Library's catalog. Request textbooks at the Circulation Desk. Use these books for up to two hours in
the Library. Call numbers are designated by course number.
Print Books
Search for books in the Library's catalog. Also find print materials via the "Books and eBooks" tab on the Library website. Search by topic, title, author, etc.
- Circulating Books: Located on the Lower Level. Check out up to 10 books for one month at a time with your FSC ID
- Reference Books: Located on the First Floor. Must be used within the Library. Includes encyclopedias, handbooks, dictionaries, test prep books, etc.
eBooks
Search for ebooks via the "Books and eBooks" tab on the Library website. Search by topic, title, author, etc. View materials
as a PDF and access from off campus with your FSC username and password.
Soil Survey of Nassau County, New York (1987)
Soil Survey of Suffolk County, New York (1975)
NOTE: Soil Survey of Nassau County, New York (1987) and Soil Survey of Suffolk County, New York (1975) : As of November 2018 physical copies of these titles are available through
the Department of Urban Horticulture & Design.
Citing Sources
See below for basic guidelines and examples of APA citation style.
APA Style Quiz
Why Cite?
Why you need to cite sources:
- Citing sources is the only way to use other people’s work without plagiarizing (i.e. if you are using any resource [journal article, book, website, report, interview, etc.], you NEED to give credit to the original source).
- The readers of your work need citations to learn more about your ideas and where they came from.
- Citing sources shows the amount of research you’ve done.
- Citing sources strengthens your work by lending outside support to your ideas.
In-Text Citations
In-text citations give credit to sources in the body of your paper. Use in-text citations when paraphrasing, directly quoting, or using ideas from sources.
- APA citation style uses the author-date method for in-text citations: Author(s)’ last name and the year of publication for the source should appear in the text.
- Names may appear either in the sentence itself or in parentheses following the quotation or paraphrase, but the date should always appear in the parentheses, not in the text of your sentence.
- Include page numbers if you are directly quoting the material.
See APA How to Format Citations and Helpful Tips
Reference List
Citations in the Reference List must correspond to in-text citations; The word or
phrase you use in your in-text citations must be the first thing that appears on the
left-hand margin of the corresponding entry in the Reference List.
See APA Sample Title Page and Reference List
Formatting
- Separate page labeled “References,” double-spaced, same margins as rest of paper.
- Indent the second and subsequent lines of citations by 0.5 inches to create a hanging indent.
Author Names
- Alphabetized by the last name of the first author of each work.
- Authors' names are inverted (last name, first initial).
- List all authors of a particular work for up to and including seven authors. If the work has more than seven authors, list the first six authors and then use ellipses (...) after the sixth author's name. After the ellipses, list the last author's name of the work.
Capitalization and Punctuation
- Capitalize only the first word of a title and subtitle and proper nouns (books, chapters, articles, web pages).
- Italicize titles of longer works such as books and journals.
- Do not italicize, underline, or put quotes around the titles of shorter works such as journal articles or essays in edited collections.
Citation Help
For more details and examples of APA citation style, visit the following websites:
- Purdue University Online Writing Lab (OWL)
- APA: The Basics of APA Style Tutorial
- The Writer’s Handbook: APA Documentation Guide (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
- Plagiarism.org: How Do I Cite Sources?
RESEARCH HELP | Have a question? Librarians are available to assist you during all open hours.
Thomas D. Greenley Library
Greenley Library
Circulation: 934-420-2183
Reference: 934-420-2184
reference@farmingdale.edu
| Day | Hours |
|---|---|
| Mon-Thurs | 7:45am - 11:00pm (midnight during finals) |
| Friday | 7:45am - 5:00pm |
| Saturday | 9:00am - 5:00pm |
| Sunday | 1:00pm - 9:00pm |
