The Educational Resource Information Center (ERIC) is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education to provide access to education-related literature including education-related journals, books, theses, curricula, conference papers, and standards and guidelines. Coverage from 1961-present.
Indexing and abstracts for popular teacher and administrator trade journals to assist professional educators.
Citations and abstracts of journal articles, book chapters, books, dissertations and technical reports, in psychology. Also includes psychological aspects of related disciplines such as medicine, psychiatry, nursing, sociology, education, pharmacology, physiology, linguistics, anthropology, business and law.
Kanopy includes documentaries and feature films. All videos provided through the Kanopy streaming video platform have public performance rights.
A streaming video platform with thousands of documentaries, educational films and news reels. Content from Films on Demand can be shown in the classroom setting and linked in your Canvas course.
A sociology research database with full-text for many journals dating back to 1895.
A multidisciplinary database with full-text articles in the arts, business, health, medicine, history, science, technology, social sciences. Includes scholarly articles, professional publication, and magazines.
Access a collection of news and business information and law-related resources (legal documents, cases, statutes, regulations, and articles).
Search by genre, title, or author. Includes reading recommendations and award lists.
Country reports that include local customs, basic economic and social data, politics and history, national flags, national anthems, etc. CultureGrams consists of three editions of country reports updated annually: World Edition, World Kids Edition, and States Edition.
Connect to the ERIC database and type some keywords that describe the information you're hoping to find.
At the results page, you can set limiters to refine the results.
Results below reflect new limiters. Click to connect to full text. Consider using the words the database uses to describe articles to find additional articles related to the topic.