[Eril-l] resources to help students find free datasets across the curriculum?

Beth Evans BEvans at brooklyn.cuny.edu
Tue Feb 22 11:30:33 PST 2022


It looks like Google has made a stab at this:
https://www.google.com/publicdata/directory

And this one is from Simmons. Not a search tool but a directory.
http://oad.simmons.edu/oadwiki/Data_repositories


Beth

Beth Evans
Brooklyn College Library
City University of New York

From: Eril-l <eril-l-bounces at lists.eril-l.org> On Behalf Of Melissa Belvadi
Sent: Tuesday, February 22, 2022 1:48 PM
To: ERIL-L listserv <eril-l at lists.eril-l.org>
Subject: [Eril-l] resources to help students find free datasets across the curriculum?

CAUTION: This email is from outside BC, so examine it closely before opening attachments or clicking on links

Hi,

Does anyone know of any free or commercial-subscription databases that help students find raw datasets to use in their papers/projects, across the curriculum?
They could be large research datasets associated with a specific faculty research project/publication, or sets coming out of government agencies (hopefully not just the US), or NGOs/intergovernmental agencies, or any other reliable producers of raw datasets.

So far I am under the impression that so much of this is freely available, but so widely scattered all over the Internet, that we could really use a comprehensive, multidisciplinary finding tool.

The closest I've found so far is ICPSR, which is along the idea I have in mind, but not nearly comprehensive enough and also totally US-centric.

There seems to be some effort in this regard specifically for biomed data, especially from the NIH, but I'm looking for something truly multidisciplinary, like a Google Scholar or Academic Search/OneFile Academic for datasets rather than books/articles.

I think this may be to the 2020s what videos were for academic libraries 20 years ago - something on our periphery that needs to be given the same quality of discovery/access tools as we do for books and articles, and now videos.

So far what I can find is mostly Libguide type of advice with a handful of links - we would never try to make a libguide as our only discovery tool for our books, and maybe it's time we provide datasets with a similar serious search index. Or have we, and I just don't know about it?


Melissa Belvadi
Collections Librarian
University of Prince Edward Island
mbelvadi at upei.ca<mailto:mbelvadi at upei.ca>


-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.eril-l.org/pipermail/eril-l-eril-l.org/attachments/20220222/d8f87fbc/attachment.html>


More information about the Eril-l mailing list