Books, government documents, journals, newspapers, maps, archival collections, music, videos, conference proceedings, and other physical collections of the University Libraries can be found using the library catalog:
https://catalog.libraries.psu.edu/
If you're looking for individual journal or newspaper articles, more e-books, and e-journals, use LionSearch or a database instead. To request books, journal articles, and other materials you can't find in our library systems, use our Interlibrary Loan services or Ask a Librarian for help.
Use the search box at the top of the page for simple searches. Choose from the drop-down to search by keyword, the title, the author/creator's name, or a subject. Narrow your results using the sidebar facets.
Use the Advanced Search to create a more complicated query. Advanced search allows you to use additional fields including: identifier, series, publisher, location, language, format/media type, and publication dates.
For example, if you only want books about homelessness published after 2000, you could use the following fields:
Keyword: homelessness Format: Book Publication year: 2000 - [leave blank]
Get even better results by using one or more of the tips in this section to structure your search. You can use these in the search box at the top of each page or in Advanced Search. They can also be used with each other, as shown in some of the nested search examples which also use Boolean connectors.
Use quotes around exact phrases to get more specific results, e.g. "remote sensing" or "environmental racism".
Use AND, OR, or NOT to expand or narrow your search.
+
narrows your search: a keyword search for quilt AND Amish
finds things which have both words in their record. You can also put a plus sign in front of words you want including. quilt +Amish
is the same as quilt AND Amish
. There is no space between the + sign and the word.sheep OR goat
finds things about sheep, or goats, or both.-
narrows your search: a keyword search for quilt NOT Amish
finds things about quilts but not about Amish quilts or quilters. You can also put a minus sign in front of the word you don't want included. This is helpful, when you want to search several words and exclude one, for example: quilt design -Amish
.Wildcards let you search variations of one or more characters. You can use two wildcard searches in the catalog:
?
in a word to replace a single character. For example, Latin?
will search for Latino, Latina, and other one-character variants like Latinx, Latin@, or Latine but will not search for "Latin."*
in a word or at the beginning or end of the word to replace 0 to infinite characters. For example, a search for environment*
will return results with environment, environmental, environmentalism, and other words beginning with "environment."You can combine wildcards, using as many ?
or *
as you need. For example, wom?n*
will return results with woman, women, womyn, womxn, women's, womanpower, and similar words.
Use parentheses to nest searches. For example, (Iraq OR Kuwait) AND oil
searches for results with either "Iraq" or "Kuwait," as well as results which have both, and then narrows only to results which also have "oil."
You can nest and combine parenthetical searches. For example, if you wanted to search for resources about Iraq or Kuwait and oil OR about Russia and gas or pipelines, you'd nest parentheses: ((Iraq OR Kuwait) AND oil) OR (Russia AND (gas OR pipeline))
.
Narrow your search results using the facets on the left sidebar. Know you're looking for a musical score? Use the Formats facet tab and select Musical Score. You can also narrow results:
Clear facets by unchecking them in the sidebar or at the top of search results. To clear all facets and start over, choose "Start Over" at the top of the page.