| Books at your campus |
Your campus may have a collection of books.
Check with your campus office for more information. |
| Articles in electronic full-text |
Fuller subscribes to full-text databases, with
tens of thousands of high quality
articles. See the databases page.
These articles are NOT available on the open web, that is you cannot
find them by searching Google.
For first time users here is Help with
remote access. |
| E-books |
Fuller subscribes to e-book
databases
such as NetLibrary and IPreach. The NetLibrary e-books can
also be found in the online catalog. |
| Help with research |
For help with your research,
phone or email Reference Services |
| Libraries in your local area |
Public and University libraries own
many books, journals, and eBooks that you may use for course work.
Many larger public libraries have a surprisingly good religion
collection, and almost all offer Interlibrary Loan for books found
in WorldCat and for articles when
you have a citation from databases.
Most university libraries allow visitors, and many allow check out,
perhaps for a small annual fee. Universities often subscribe
to full-text databases different from Fuller's, and often visitors
may use those databases. |
| Interlibrary Loan options |
Your local Public Library probably offers
Interlibrary Loan to card holders. If you find a specific
citation for a book or article, they can probably get it for you
(though dissertations, and other rare books many not be available).
You don't need to know which libraries own the book or journal.
The library may charge a small fee; some libraries limit the number
of requests you may make in a year. |
|
WorldCat.org |
With
WorldCat.org you may search
for a book and find libraries near your IP address or zip code which
own the book. The databases page
has a version of WorldCat with more sophisticated searching options. |
| Free online documents |
There are various free sources on the
web. It's important to consider the quality of the sources:
who wrote it and what are their qualifications? when was it written?
is it peer reviewed? what perspective are they writing from?
Full-text from
online sites
Suggested Theological and
Religious Internet Resources
|
| Electronic full-text (paid by student) |
You can search for and purchase articles yourself for $10-$50.
However, there are not many theology and religious articles that you
can purchase individually online.
More details. |
| Document delivery from Pasadena |
As a last resort, Fuller's Pasadena library will send you articles
and books from its
collection for a fee.
More
details. |