I'm just going to post here a number of information resources you might find useful for study.
Of course I've already mentioned Wikipedia, Google Scholar (which also searches Google Books), and PubMed. Here are several other good sites.
MedScape is a medical information site with a drug index (including a drug interaction checker), and entries on diseases, conditions, procedures, and anatomy. They also have news and continuing education sections. You need to register in order to access the site but it's free.
Drugs.com is a drug index. The entries include pronunciation sound files. This site also has an interaction checker, a pill identifier section, and news and alerts.
National Guideline Clearinghouse has guidelines and scopes of practice for health professionals.
Merck Manual is a medical encyclopedia/library.
The Medical Terminology Pronunciation Jukebox is great if you're having trouble (and you know you are) figuring out how some of these words are pronounced.
Here are some procedures and skills videos.
Here is a virtual stethoscope.
The Center for Disease Control is a great source of information as is the World Health Organization.
A couple other drug sites: Physician's Desk Reference, Drugs@FDA, and The Orange Book (FDA approved drug products with therapeutic equivalence evaluations.
Here's a dictionary: Longman.
Here's a etymology (word origin) dictionary: Etymonline. This is great for looking up word stems, prefixes, and suffixes.
Yay, Nursing Ethics!
A little bit on Senior Health from the National Institutes of Health.
And for the very young, the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Having trouble with your math? Here, here, and here.
Here's a great study resource: Evolve. You can create a student account and register for their products for free which I highly recommend. The Nursing Diagnosis Handbook by Ackley has about 80 nursing diagnoses and a care plan constructor. The Thibodeau and Patton anatomy books have an anatomy coloring book to help with memorization. Many of the books have NCLEX style questions for each chapter. There's also a fluids and electrolytes tutorial on the Maternity Nursing, 11th edition book by Leifer.
Global Health College Library blog. Research skills, information literacy, book overviews, study resources for health sciences/nursing students.
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
PowerPoint How-to 2
Next up is the Insert bar.
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The first section lets you add tables. Click the little arrow next to the word and in the drop-down box choose how many rows and columns you want. Once the table has been created you can add more rows and columns as you need them.
The next row allows you to add illustrations. Adding pictures, clip art, and shapes is the same as in Word: Link. (Ignore Photo Album for now.)
SmartArt allows you to add information as an illustration. There are 7 different ways of doing this: List, Process, Cycle, Hierarchy, Relationship, Matrix, and Pyramid. A video might be best to show how this works. (Click the full screen button in the bottom right corner to see a larger version of the video.)
The Chart button does exactly that; it lets you add charts.
The Links section makes it possible to add a hyperlink to a picture or section of text. You can use the action button to add sounds or make programs open when you click or pass the mouse over the selected item.
The Text section has a button that allows you to create your own text box. You can also add a header or footer, create WordArt, add the date and time and the slide numbers.
The media clips section lets you add video and sound, either from something you’ve saved or from the clip art file.
Thursday, February 9, 2012
PowerPoint How-to 1
I know a lot of you are required to produce PowerPoint presentations for class and, like Word, PowerPoint can be kind of tricky to work with. So my next few posts will be on using PowerPoint.
Let’s start off with the basics: the working section of the screen.
Click to make bigger. |
The middle area is your working area. This is where you write and design each slide. To the left is your view of the slides you’ve created in miniature. You can see it in slide view, which will show you the order of your slides, or outline view, where you will see all the text you’ve written arranged in order.
The bottom is your note section. For each slide you can write down what you want to say about it or you can just jot down points you want to remember. When you give your presentation these cannot be seen by your audience.
At the bottom right are your view options. The first view is the normal view, that is, what the illustration above shows. The second button will give you the slide sorter view: it shows you your slides in order so you can more easily rearrange them if your want. The third view is the slide show. This is what you want to press to start your presentation. You can use this to see how your slides will look.
When you are in presentation mode, press the arrow key → to go forward. Pressing the escape key “Esc” will end your presentation.
Next to the view buttons is a slider that allows you to zoom in and out so you can see your slide bigger if need be.
Next let’s look at the Home tab.
First up is the slides section. You have a new slide button which you can press to add slides. Note the little arrow next to the words “New Slides.” Click this to get a drop-down menu with further options of slide designs. These pre-set layouts give you the areas you need to work with so you can just add your own content rather than trying to add text and picture boxes yourself. Try using different layouts so you can learn what they have. You can always erase them is they don’t suit what you’re doing. (If you just press the new slide button you get what layout you chose last.)
The Layout button lets you change the layout (or design) of the slide you are currently working on.
The Reset button returns the slide you are working on to the default layout. So if you made changes you don’t like you can put it back to the way you started out.
The Delete button deletes the slide currently in your view area.
Next is the Font section, which works exactly like the one in Word. For a more detailed look at it go here: http://ghntslibrary.blogspot.com/2011/10/microsoft-office-word-review.html
The Paragraph is also similar to Word although you can change the direction of text here so it can be vertical.
The Drawing section lets you create different shapes. Just choose the shape you want, click and hold the left mouse button on the slide and move the mouse (while holding down the button) to make a shape. Let go of the button when you are done. You can then re-size and reposition it. The little scribble button lets you draw on the slide.
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