St. Thomas Libraries Blog - News, Events and Musings from the UST Libraries - Page 60
Database Highlights & Trials

Free Behavioral Science Journals

Taylor & Francis, a journal publisher, is giving away free journal content for the rest of the month.  Here’s their press release:

Click here to start browsing all Routledge Behavioral Science journals!

We are delighted to offer free online access to our complete range of Routledge Behavioral Science Journals throughout February 2013.  We publish over 200 journals covering a range of subject areas including: Mental Health; Social Psychology; Neuropsychology Cognitive Psychology; Psychotherapy and Counseling; Developmental Psychology; Gerontology; Work and Organisational Psychology; Marriage and Family Therapy; Psychoanalysis; Creative Arts and Expressive Therapies; Behavioral Medicine and much more, so make the most of this unique opportunity and start browsing now.

Free journal content is great and I’m not trying to distract from it, but Free your Mind reminds me of one thing and one thing only:

 

None of you may remember this, but your parents will.  Good stuff.

Libraries

Sunday Nights Live: Librarian Edition!

lauraface

It’s Sunday night. 

You have a project due tomorrow and you still need one more article.

Who ya gonna call?

That’s right – the library!  

Specifically, you can now chat with me, since I’ll be the UST Librarian on call from 7pm-10pm on Sunday evenings.

Due to high demand, we have decided that starting Spring 2013 we at UST Libraries will add three more hours of reference services to our normal schedule.  I, Laura Hansen, will be available every Sunday evening to help you with anything you might need.

Think you can stump me?! 

To reach me, feel free to use any of the standard methods on the “Ask a Librarian” section of our new library website.  Although I won’t be physically at the library, I’ll be available via phone, email, IM chat, Skype, text, and even tweet (you can reach any UST Librarian these ways during our other reference hours, too!)

ask_a_librarian

*Note: Even when UST Librarians aren’t on duty, you can always get help through our 24/7 AskMN Service.

Database Highlights & Trials

With apologies to e. e. cummings*

In Just-
spring       semester when the weather is winter-
ific the website
for the library

is new     and    improved

and seniorsandjuniors use it
to book study rooms and
find movies and it’s
spring

semester where there’s the  promise of warmth

the website
for library services
is blue    and    improved
and sophomoresandfreshmen use it

to find articles and get help

it’s
spring
and

the

library

website           is
new
and
improved

*[in Just-]

Libraries, News & Events

Welcome to the New Website!

As you may have noticed, the UST Libraries website got a facelift over J-term!   Before you start to panic when you need to do an assignment or complete some research, here is a brief tour of the new layout:

We hope that this new design will make it easier for you to access our resources.

If you have troubles finding what you need, please let us know.  In the meantime, thank you for visiting and we hope your spring semester is off to a great start!

Archbishop Ireland Library, Charles J. Keffer Library, Libraries, New Materials, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library, Uncategorized

UST Libraries Embarks on New Ebook Initiative

Demand Driven Acquisition/Patron Driven Acquisition pilot project has started at the University of St. Thomas.

What does that mean? Liaisons in Business, Education and Psychology have hand-crafted profiles with Coutts/Ingram for the purposes of identifying and adding ebook records to CLICnet in those 3 disciplines. We won’t own these – AND they are available for use. We will own them once the third user goes into the book itself or the index (not the cover page or table of contents).  The books should all be able to be used by more than one person at a time, but we could not limit our profile to only downloadable – until more publishers are on board. The sample size would have been too small.

These should all work and act like all other MyiLibrary books.

Questions?

Ask Linda Hulbert (lahulbert@stthomas.edu) or 651-962-5016 if she doesn’t know the answer, she’ll make a good one up! On the spot!

Archbishop Ireland Library, Charles J. Keffer Library, Libraries, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library, Uncategorized

UST Research Online Usage Data

USTRO

UST Research Online is the the University of St. Thomas’ institutional repository. Initiated by the library staff, the goal is to include the creative and scholarly works of the faculty, students and staff of the university: including, but not limited to, theses and dissertations. During the last two years that the resource has been active, staff have uploaded 631 papers and they have been downloaded over 60,000 times. The content is obviously highly discoverable in Google (62% of the searches), Google Scholar (21% of the searches) and 17% from other external searches. The content is now in our own Summon search.

I want to share some data. Our first and most robust faculty collection is that of  Opus College of Business. Over 31% of the downloads and hits are content from OCB with Ethics and Business Law leading the way with over 4,000. The most downloaded paper from OCB is Jeffrey Oxman’s “Price Inflation and Stock Returns” exceeding 1,300 downloads! The dissertation from CELC with the most downloads is Emily R Murphrey’s Effective Treatment of Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and Early
Attachment at over 800 downloads. At 1,123 the UST Law Journal’s most downloaded article is “Incapacitation through Maiming: Chemical Castration, the Eighth Amendment, and the Denial of Human Dignity” by John Stinneford. John Heintz’s article “Developing a Library School Course in Government Statistics,” from the Library staff collections was downloaded 264 times and leads the pack.

The Law School added the University of St. Thomas Law Journal including all of the back content. And its use is 56% of the repository – nearly 30,000 downloads. We are interested in adding the other journals published here at the university.

The theses and dissertations of the College of Education, Leadership and Counseling including Education – Leadership and Education – Organization Development and Psychology are growing collections and have seen downloads in excess of 5,500. We have recently uploaded the theses of the School of Social Work. We look forward to watching their use.

Library staff article downloads and hits exceed 1,000.

If you are interested in adding your content to the repository, please contact Linda Hulbert – lahulbert@stthomas.edu.

Libraries, News & Events, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library

Library to host Staff Book Swap, January 17

All are welcome and invited!

The Non-Exempt Staff Council invites you to a warm- get-together on Thursday afternoon, January 17, 2013 from 2pm to 4pm in the O’Shaughnessy Room (Rm 108) of the O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library for a Staff Book Swap!

Bring favorite books that you no longer wish to keep – share your reading experiences – enjoy some cocoa and cookies with friends old and new – pick up some books you haven’t read yet!  

We’ll have a little impromptu book store set up just for the afternoon – and it’s all free.

We hope you will be able to come!   And please visit our website to learn about the work of the Staff Council for Hourly Employees.

If you have books you would like to drop off for the Swap, please bring them anytime between January 8 and Noon on January 17 to the library office, Room 203, where we’ll keep them safe until the Book Swap. Questions? Please call Julie at 962-5014.

News & Events, Uncategorized

Nancy Sims open access presentation at UST is online!

Nancy Sims, the copyright program librarian at the Univesity of Minnesota, and advocate for democratic information access, spoke at UST last month about open access publishing, a new model for scholarly communication. The event was sponsored by the UST libraries and it was well attended by faculty and librarians from UST and neighboring institutions. If you missed her presentation it has been made freely available to watch here.