Dr. Caesar Perkowski visits the Dorothy W. Hightower Collaborative
Learning Center & Library about two to three times a week. He picks up
books from our collection or those he has ordered through GIL Express.
Perkowski incorporates the library into his classroom by requiring his 1101
students to “attend a general library orientation session to learn about the
resources available through the library, on site and online.” Perkowski also
requires students who are working on a group project to go to the library to
talk to the librarians about researching their topics. Perkowski uses LibGuides
in his classrooms. Perkowski feels the librarians put care and effort into
creating the LIbGuides so he encourages his students to use them. Perkowski
recommends the Academic Search Complete database because he feels it “serves as
a starting point in anyone’s research.” Academic Search Complete leads people
easily to other databases that might prove useful in their research. He recommends
GALILEO to his colleagues because it is “a fantastic repository of materials
and databases.” Perkowski loves the feel of the library since it has been
renovated. He feels it has a more modern feel and look, and the space and
lighting “make it a pleasant place to study and socialize.”
Tuesday, September 5, 2017
Thursday, August 31, 2017
Library Champions
We are starting a new series this week called Library Champions. Library Champions are faculty and staff that use the library for research and classroom instruction. Our first Library Champion is Dr. Doug Davis. Dr. Davis uses the Dorothy W. Hightower Collaborative Learning Center & Library all the time. Davis uses it for research, and says the GIL Express is one of the keys to doing scholarship here at Gordon State College. Davis uses GIL Express to acquire texts from other universities. Davis encourages his students to use the library for their own research, and he takes his 1102 students over “for several weeks during the semester to use the computer classrooms.” “What better way to use your research skills than in the library,” Davis said. “The students can physically put their hands on texts, and virtually search the website for tutorials on Gil and GALILEO.” Davis also encourages his students to use the LibGuides the librarians have set up for his classes. Davis uses them as an extension to his syllabus and he relies on them for his 1102 and 1502 classes. Dr. Davis suggests his colleagues make use of the librarians to set up LibGuides and run orientations for their classroom. Also, for personal research Davis recommends GIL Express and Lexis Nexis Academic, also called Nexis Uni. What Davis likes most about the library is “how helpful the librarians are, the new computer rooms, and the nice fresh space.”
Friday, August 18, 2017
Welcome back Faculty
Welcome back faculty! We would like to update you on some new procedures.
New library hours are as follows: Sunday 2 p.m. - 10 p.m., Monday - Wednesday 8 a.m. - 10 p.m., Thursday 8 a.m. - 8 p.m., Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m., and Saturday 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
Faculty will now be able to access your GALILEO password, renew books, and save search queries through your "My Account." Faculty may check out books from the first day of the Fall Semester. The books will not be due back until the last day of the Summer semester.
After 28 days, if someone requests the book, it will be recalled an must be returned to the library.
Everyone must now pay late fines. If the book is late there will be a $.25 charge per day up to $10.00. Books go into lost status 29 days after the due date. If the book is not returned there will be a $35 processing fee and a replacement cost. Library privileges will be revoked and your account blocked until the fees are paid or books have been returned.
If your library account is blocked, you can still access GALILEO through Desire to Learn without a password.
We accept recommendations for purchasing library materials, but we will not purchase textbooks. We will accept materials to be placed on course reserve; however, materials that have evaluative copyrights cannot be placed on reserve. There are other instances we cannot put materials on reserve; ask Beverly Eskridge for more information.
If you have any questions regarding these or other services, please contact your personal librarian: http://hightowerclclibrary.blogspot.com/2017/05/personal-librarians.html
New library hours are as follows: Sunday 2 p.m. - 10 p.m., Monday - Wednesday 8 a.m. - 10 p.m., Thursday 8 a.m. - 8 p.m., Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m., and Saturday 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
Faculty will now be able to access your GALILEO password, renew books, and save search queries through your "My Account." Faculty may check out books from the first day of the Fall Semester. The books will not be due back until the last day of the Summer semester.
After 28 days, if someone requests the book, it will be recalled an must be returned to the library.
Everyone must now pay late fines. If the book is late there will be a $.25 charge per day up to $10.00. Books go into lost status 29 days after the due date. If the book is not returned there will be a $35 processing fee and a replacement cost. Library privileges will be revoked and your account blocked until the fees are paid or books have been returned.
If your library account is blocked, you can still access GALILEO through Desire to Learn without a password.
We accept recommendations for purchasing library materials, but we will not purchase textbooks. We will accept materials to be placed on course reserve; however, materials that have evaluative copyrights cannot be placed on reserve. There are other instances we cannot put materials on reserve; ask Beverly Eskridge for more information.
If you have any questions regarding these or other services, please contact your personal librarian: http://hightowerclclibrary.blogspot.com/2017/05/personal-librarians.html
Wednesday, May 3, 2017
Discovery Tool
Discover GALILEO is a way to search content from GALILEO's 300+ databases and collections. With a single search, Discover GALILEO combines the ease and speed of popular internet search engines with the quality and organization of content that only a library can provide. Unlike the popular search engines that provide information inadequate for educational and research purposes, Discover GALILEO allows users to search across a wealth of quality content simultaneously. Discover GALILEO offers many research tools, including a personal research folder that allows users to save, cite, retrieve, and link to content.
D2L + GALILEO
Did you know you can search GALILEO from your Brightspace account? Just login to D2L and the GALILEO icon will be at the top of the page, along with a Discovery Tool search box on the left-hand side!
When you search GALILEO through D2L, you do not need to look up the GALILEO password.
When you search GALILEO through D2L, you do not need to look up the GALILEO password.
Monday, May 1, 2017
Films on Demand
The Films on Demand database consists of 15,500 video titles (77,000 segments) in Humanities & Social Sciences, Business & Economics, Health, and Science. It also includes a new collection of United Newsreels with an additional 260 titles (1,250 segments).
To help with your research and instructional needs, Films on Demand includes many custom content features, keyword tags, playlist footer links (allowing students to enter code provided by instructor for a specific playlist), customized video introductions, and related source & contextual help icons.
A recent improvement is the ability to link On Demand videos to your D2L online courses.
Ovid Nursing Collection
The Journals @ Ovid Nursing Collection provides full-text access to a select group of highly respected medical and nursing journals.
Content covers a wide range of scientific, medical, and healthcare disciplines including:
- Medicine
- Nursing & Health Professions
- Behavioral Sciences
- Humanities & Technology
Premium resources include:
- More than 6,000 eBooks & many book collections
- Over 1,400 peer-reviewed journals
- Dozens of journal collections
- Over 100 bibliographic and full-text databases
For more information, contact Beth Pye, your personal librarian for Humanities and Nursing & Health Sciences.
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