Education Article Databases

Core Resources

ERIC (Educational Resources Information Center) (1966 - current) Full Text Access
Use ERIC to find documents and journal articles related to educational theory or practice. Research teaching methods, cognitive behavior and comparative educational models. What Is It? Index to documents and journal articles. Sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education. Contains the ERIC Thesaurus of educational terms.

PsycInfo (1887-Present) Full Text Access
Search both American Psychological Association literature and internationally published literature in the field of psychology. What Is It? Database that indexes journal articles, book chapters, books, technical reports, and dissertations in the field of psychology.

Additional Resources

Chronicle of Higher Education (1995-) Full Text Access What Is It? Digital version of the Chronicle of Higher Education. Includes access to job classifieds and ability to subscribe to Academe Today, a daily e-mail report which summarizes the latest news in higher education. Academe Today Set up instructions

Why Use It? To research issues relating to higher education. To consult job classifieds for academic positions.

Social Sciences Abstracts (1983-Present ) Full Text Access What Is It? Multidisciplinary abstracts to articles in English language social sciences journals.

Why Use It? Search for scholarly articles in any of the social sciences fields. Find what an author has published recently. See how a topic is covered in various disciplines.

Sociological Abstracts (1952-Present) Full Text Access What Is It? Index to articles, conference proceedings and book reviews published in sociology journals and related fields such as anthropology, economics, education, linguistics, medicine, philosophy, political science, and social psychology.

Why Use It? Research topics in sociology and related fields (anthropology, linguistics, political science, economy). Search for conference proceedings, dissertations and book reviews.

Not finding what you need? Try one of these strategies.
Does your topic relate to more than one subject? Search databases in those subject areas.
Try our E-Journals for more sources.
Are you looking for books?
Search FRANCIS.