Veterinary medicine and sciences

This subject guide is designed for individuals looking for information relating to veterinary medicine and sciences or those looking to develop their information and academic literacies in these areas.

The veterinary medicine and sciences collection can be found via Library Search. Print books are available in the James Herriot Library, situated on the second floor of the Mary Stewart Building in the University’s Garscube campus.

College Librarian: Paul Cannon

Academic writing and critical appraisal

Moodle

Guides

Identifying appropriate information sources

Depending on your information requirements, you may have to look beyond the University of Glasgow Library:

  • Library Hub Discover provides access to the collections of many UK national, academic and specialist libraries.

You may also need to engage with grey literature, information that has not formally been published or undergone a peer review process.

Examples of grey literature include:

Finding relevant information

Textbooks

Journal articles

Bibliographic databases provide access to quality assessed information. Prior to searching for journal articles you should consider:

The key resources for the School of Veterinary Medicine are (in order of coverage of veterinary journals and journals with significant veterinary content, see https://doi.org/10.3138/jvme.1111.109R):

Finding fulltext articles and books

If you cannot find what you are looking for:

Managing information

Processing information

  • Academic development classes that focus on the most effective ways to revise and take exams, and how to use feedback to continually improve your academic performance

Managing information

EndNote can be used to manage and cite information.

Keeping up-to-date

Keeping up-to-date with information is a difficult task. There are various methods, tools and apps that make it easier:

Plagiarism and copyright

Attribution and avoiding plagiarism

  • Academic writing classes designed to help students understand referencing and incorporate sources into your written assessments

Copyright and IRP issues

Copyright is intended to protect the authors and creators of original material.

Further information can be found on Copyrightuser.

Presenting and communicating knowledge

Science communication classes introduces good presentation and poster design, and speaking to an audience about your work.

Systematic reviews

Additional resources to ensure that protocols and systematic reviews meet the required methodological standards. 

Managing your online identity and digital footprint

Help control your digital identity by promoting a positive identity online and preventing or limiting negative online identity.

Information in the workplace

Information is a key component in aiding transition to and from professional practice, whether that be on placement or upon graduation.

Professional bodies often provide access to academic and trade journals. A tutorial on practicing evidence-based veterinary medicine from the EBVM Network covers where to find evidence as a practitioner.

Need help?

Undergraduate and taught postgraduate (Masters level) students should book an appointment with the College Library Support Team.

Doctoral students and staff can make an appointment to see the College Librarian Paul Cannon via Zoom, or contact Paul via email.

For systematic reviews, a draft protocol or project plan, copies of line-by-line draft searches and pre-identified relevant literature should be emailed three working days ahead of the appointment. The systematic review resources and systematic review guide will help you develop a protocol.