If you are a nonprofit organization in Western North Carolina, this guide is intended to help you access and find peer-reviewed articles and other scholarly research to support your organization.
In the tabs above, databases are divided into the following categories:
Rachel Caldwell and the University of Tennessee Libraries provided some of the content in this guide. The authors appreciate their permission to use the material!
A great deal of scholarly publishing exists behind paywalls, making it inaccessible to a good deal of the public. Open Access (OA) is a movement to make scholarly research openly available.
If you know researchers, graduate students, or faculty members, talk to them about how their research can help you and your organization. Ask them to publish openly. If they have questions, librarians are available to help authors identify OA publishers and journals with good practices.
Ashlea Green greenam7@appstate.edu
John Wiswell wiswellj@appstate.edu
Jackie Eagleson eaglesonjj@appstate.edu
Whitney Bevill bevillwl@appstate.edu
Research in Childhood & Education
Open Search:
On-Campus Search:
Research in Health
Open Search:
On-Campus Search:
Research in Poverty & Homelessness/Houselessness
Open Search:
On-Campus Search:
Research in Nonprofit Administration
Open Search:
On-Campus Search:
Grants & Funding: More information on grants and funding, including Pivot, selected websites, databases, and print resources in the library. For more information, click here. Also see SPIN, the world's largest database of sponsored funding opportunities.
Free Tech Resources: Free resources that will help you create better presentations, videos and graphics. Resources include images, screen/video capture, audio/video editing, 3D design, data visualization, poster presentations, and authoring/annotation. Learn more here.
Diagnosing Search Problems from Harvard Library
Contact your public library to find out what resources they have, and take advantage of interlibrary loan.
Contact the author of an article directly.
If you have children in college, especially four-year public institutions, they may have access to a wide array of full-text articles and their library may allow guest wireless access.