New York Theological Seminary

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Online Theological Resources

This excellent site provides links to many theological journals, many of which are available free online. Some of them are available in printed form by subscription; others are exclusively electronic. This site is maintained by Elizabeth T. Knuth at St. John's School of Theology Seminary.
This site at the University of Calgary, in Canada, is maintained by Saundra Lipton, and contains a large number of electronic journals that in several areas of religious study.
Biblical peer reviewed journals.

Free Online Journals

Maintained by Hanover college. A broad range of Journals and Periodicals in many psychology, psychiatry and sociology.
This site of free journal links maintained by the University of Houston.
A wide range of English language articles available online. Maintained by Charles W. Bailey, Jr.
Google scholar searches only for indexed academic articles on the web.
Online Directories and Organizaiton of Resources
Carrot2 Clustering Engine(www.carrot2.org):
search engine does not determine the quality of informationo, but "clusters" the results in categories according to "subject." This provides for a more focused search
Google Directory (http://directory.goog.com/:
Sites are selected by librarians as well as Google PageRank. The information is gathered by ODP (Open Directory Project), an exciting development athttp://www.dmoz.org. Sites are organized by category.
Librarian's Internet Index (http://lii.org):
Developed by Carol Leita of the Berkely Public Library in 1997, websites can be arranged in directory style by subject. All additions to the site are made by librarians.
Wabash Center Internet Guide to Religion(www.wabashcenter.wabash.edu/resources/guide_headings.aspx):
The Wabash cite is one of the most outstanding religious resources on the Internet. This guide organizes religion and theology by subject.

 

Turabian Formatting Guides

Bridgewater State College provides clear examples of both note and Bibliographic formats for most of the major citations
Formats for Footnotes and Bibliography - UNC Department of Religion
Nicely laid out with a table of contents.
Turabian says little about citing electron texts. The style for Internet and electronic text citations are quite varied and often inconsistent. "When you cite information from the Internet that is not from an edited, online scholarly journal or a well-known source such as the Encyclopedia Britannica or the New York Times, you are to extend the footnote with information about the author or the institution if the author is not known. If you cannot figure out the identity of the author or of the institution responsible for the website, you should not use it as a research resource.
This brilliant tool produces both foonotes and bibliography entries in Turabian format. It does not check manual errors so it can never substitute a knowledge of footnote form. A statement that this is the way eTurabian said to do it is an unacceptable excuse for bad citations.