Build Students’ Research and Learning Skills Now and For Their Future

ProQuest Central Student is designed to guide students to the most authoritative content across disciplines and formats so they become more proficient, successful researchers – prepared for higher education, careers and adult life.

Combining thousands of journals, magazines, newspapers and reports, this multidisciplinary resource integrates twelve complete ProQuest databases in science, technology, education, social sciences, humanities, and news, and provides access to Research Library, a source for core academic content across multiple disciplines. ProQuest Central Student gives students experience with accessible college-level content in a variety of formats. And because ProQuest Central Student provides the same user experience as the ProQuest academic platform, your students will have a seamless transition to college level research resources.

ProQuest Central Students, teachers and librarians will find:

    • More full text — This collection of full-text periodicals have been selected specifically to support secondary and high school programs. More than 80% of all titles are full text; and one-click linking automatically connects citations to full text wherever it resides electronically in your library.
    • More subjects — Subjects throughout the curriculum are represented in this single resource, across nearly 14,000 full-text periodicals, of which over 11,500 are academic journals. This international mix of scholarly, professional, and consumer periodicals cover over 100 subjects, including business, the sciences, medical, technology, literature, the arts, and history.
    • More types of content — ProQuest Central Student includes content of many formats, including video – becoming ever more popular with students and teachers. Users will find segments of the award-winning 60 MINUTES documentary series from 1997- 2014 providing rich context for contemporary issues, plus, transcripts of top radio and television programs. Blogs, news wires, and government reports, such as White House Daily Press Briefings, are fodder for student engagement and great papers!

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