EndNote Workshops for March/April

Introductory EndNote workshop

This session is aimed at students and staff who have never worked with EndNote before.

EndNote Introductory workshops will be held on:

Friday 16th of March 2007 1.00pm – 2.30pm Walton Library, Glen Cluster.
THIS WORKSHOP IS FULLY BOOKED

Tuesday 10th of April 2007 1.00pm – 2.30pm Robinson Library, Room 161
THIS WORKSHOP IS FULLY BOOKED

Thursday 19th of April 2007 1.00pm – 2.30pm Walton Library, Glen Cluster.

Workshops are open to Newcastle University staff and students.

Places are limited, so please book by emailing Jackie.Dunn@ncl.ac.uk

http://www.ncl.ac.uk/library/workshops_endnote.php

Endnote Glossary

We often refer to unfamiliar terms and concepts when using Endnote, so we are thinking of developing a short glossary of terms to help people understand exactly what they mean. There are already some useful examples on the web – see Edith Cowan Library and the University of Wollongong – but we want to be sure that our glossary is appropriate to users here at Newcastle. For this we need some help! Please email us with suggestions for terms and concepts in Endnote which we can add to our glossary. They might be terms which you yourself have had trouble with or words which colleagues have queried. As soon as we have enough feedback we shall start working on the glossary.

Connection files again

Just a quick update about the connection files, which some people use to connect out from Endnote, mainly to library catalogues. If you are using Endnote on a university PC which has an IP address which begins with 10. the connection file to the British Library catalogue will not work. However, you can access it via the RAS or from PCs with different IP addresses.

Connection Files

It seems that there is a problem at present using connection files if you are using Endnote on the university network, although they are working fine through the RAS. We have asked ISS to investigate this for us, so hopefully it will be resolved soon. Meanwhile, if you want to use a connection file, just log on via RAS.

Using the journals term list to display abbreviated journal titles

EndNote uses Term Lists for author/editor names, journal titles and keywords. Term Lists are created automatically as you enter new terms into these fields in an EndNote library. One benefit of this is that the Term Lists help with data entry. If you begin to enter a name, journal or keyword that you have previously used in that library, EndNote will complete the term for you to speed up data entry. However EndNote does also have files of term lists which can be attached to your library. These can be of use when you want to change your bibliography so that it shows an abbreviated form of a journal title rather than the full title.

In order to do this, go to >Tools >Open Term List >Journals Term List

It is good practice to delete anything already in the Journals Term List at the outset, otherwise your bibliography will remain unchanged. Do this first.

Now click on the Lists tab.
With Journals highlighted, click on Import List.
From C:/Program Files/Endnote X/Terms Lists select whichever file suits your subject, e.g. medical.txt, and click on Open.
This will import several thousand terms into your terms list.
Go back to the Terms tab and you will see these in there.

If you highlight a term and click on edit, you will see that as well as the full title, you have two abbreviated versions of the title, one with punctuation, one without. You can now edit your EndNote style to use one of these abbreviations. To do this click on Edit, Output Styles, if using EndNote on campus the style you want to edit must be saved in your h: drive and your EndNote preferences must be changed. (See http://www.ncl.ac.uk/library/endnote_tips_style.php). Open Style Manager and select the style you wish to edit. Click on Journal Names and select the abbreviation you wish to use. Close and save changes, now apply this style to your word document and your journal titles should be replaced with abbreviations.

If this does not happen it is likely to be because:
a) you didn’t delete what was in the journals term list at the outset, or
b) the particular titles for which it has not worked do not appear in the journals term list, where that is the case you can add them manually and re-format the bibliography, this will now pick up the abbreviated version of the title.

Managing long documents

There are several ways of using Endnote with a long document such as a thesis, which may be split into many chapters. They all depend on a good understanding of Word, rather than Endnote and I’m delighted to say that Rebecca McCready, who is an expert in Word, is allowing us to link to her excellent online resources. These resources are primarily for the Medical Faculty so Rebecca may not be able to follow up queries, though HASS and SAgE people will see a specific resource on long documents for HASS and SAgE which Rebecca has provided. We will be extending the instuctions on the Endnote Top Tips pages too, once we are able to make amendments to the Library web pages again.

Harvard at Newcastle Style

Although Endnote comes with a large selection of styles, we have amended the Harvard version to suit our needs and called it “Harvard at Newcastle”. There is no official standard version of the Harvard style, therefore we have used the “Cite them right: referencing made easy” by Richard Pears and Graham Shields as the criteria for the layout of the citation and the bibliography. This is generally accepted as suitable for UK universities who follow Harvard.

This style is available in EndNote X as part of the styles folder. If you are using an older version of EndNote you will need to download the latest version of Harvard at Newcastle from http://www.ncl.ac.uk/library/endnote_tips_harvard.php

If you wish to use “Cite them right: referencing made easy” there are copies available in the Robinson Library.

New features in EndNote X

This a summary of new things which have been added to EndNote X.

View the contents of up to 8 different fields in the reference list display.
New additional reference types including Ancient Text, Dictionary, Encyclopedia and Grant.
Electronic Source is renamed Web Page.
New import filters, connections and output styles. The main one added is the Newcastle Library Catalogue.
Hide empty fields to reduce type scrolling through references.
Reference type lists are now in alphabetical order making locating easier.
New—compressed library option creates a single-file
backup for moving EndNote libraries between computers
Store up to 45 links per reference in the “Link to PDF” field
Convert existing PDF links to the new EndNote-relative link in
one step
Use the PDF icon in the EndNote toolbar to open the first
linked file in the highlighted reference
“Change Text” and “Change Fields” include a new option for tab
and carriage returns used in phrases
Search fields and words using “begins with” and “ends with”—replaces
“Use Full Text Index” of previous versions
“RTF Document Scan” is renamed to “Format Paper”
Customise library and reference toolbars in Mac
OS X version for quick access to frequently used commands
Identify individual references easily in
Spotlight Mac OS X Tiger search results—more descriptive
details available.

Taken from http://www.endnote.com/enXinfo.asp

Easy way to download from the Newcastle Library Catalogue in EX

When we upgraded to EndNote X we were able to place the connection file for our library catalogue in the C Drive. This means you can now easily connect with the library catalogue and download references directly into your library. No need to save the file onto your own filespace!

To search the library catalogue through EndNote X :

Open a library within EndNote.
Click on Tools then Connect
Scroll right and click on Connect again.
A box will appear called Choose a connection file. Locate Newcastle University Library in the alphabetical list. Either double click or select it and choose Connect in order to open the catalogue.
Type in your keywords, author or title in order to locate the items you are interested in.
Once the catalogue has found a list of matched items, a box will appear called Confirm Remote search. This will indicate the number of references, if there is a large number you may wish to close this and add more keywords to your search.
If you wish to display the results click on OK.
Double-click on a reference to expand it. If you want to import any references to your EndNote Library you must close any expanded references. Highlight the reference you want to import by clicking once on them. If you wish to import multiple references hold down Ctrl and click on them. Click on Copy References to. Then click on Choose Library. Select the EndNote Library you want to import the references into.

The references are then imported into that Library.