Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Free ebook for January
To access this book, begin at the library homepage, choose "Online Reference Resources" and then "netLibrary." This source is available from Jan. 1 - 31, 2009.
Happy New Year!
Friday, December 05, 2008
Book Swap
1. Please leave donations at the Main Circ Desk.
2. Books for this exchange may be fiction or non-fiction.
3. No textbooks, please.
4. Individuals may take a book to read and keep it or return it to the collection. To return it to the collection, please leave it at the Main Circ Desk of the Library.
5. The library staff reserves the right to not accept books for this collection.
6. The library staff will occasionally discard books from this collection.
Monday, December 01, 2008
New ebook for December!
Tuesday, November 04, 2008
November's free ebook from netLibrary
"Written by a practicing lawyer who has helped hundreds keep their homes or come out of foreclosure financially sound, Foreclosure Survival Guide provides practical solutions and information that can help readers make the best decisions possible, including what to expect from foreclosure, whether it's worth trying to keep the house and using Chapter 13 bankruptcy to save a home."
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
Wednesday, September 10, 2008
The Columbia Gazetteer of the World, 2nd edition, is on the shelves in Stoxen Library.
The three-volume set is in Reference with the call number of
Ref. G 103.5 .C65 2008
With over 170,000 entries, the Columbia Gazetteer of the World is an A to Z encyclopedia of geographical places and features. Whether you're looking for the ten highest mountain peaks in North America, the major commercial crops in Brazil's economy, all the rivers in Southeast Asia, the former name of the city of Yangon, or the natural resources available in Sub-Saharan Africa, the Gazetteer is the one-stop resource for all your information needs.
The Gazetteer features new entries and extensive revisions to reflect recent administrative divisions in countries around the world. It also contains new maps, population figures, and an expanded glossary of geographical and geological terms. With its long history of accuracy and authority, there is no other encyclopedia like Gazetteer.
The Columbia Gazetteer covers:
* Political world-countries, provinces, regions, states, counties, capitals, cities, towns, villages, and neighborhoods.
* Physical world-continents, oceans, seas, lakes, lagoons, rivers, bays, inlets, channels, and streams, along with islands, archipelagos, peninsulas, atolls, mountains, mountain ranges, canyons, deserts, valleys, and volcanoes.
* Special places-national parks and monuments, historic and archaeological sites, harbors, ports, airports, nuclear plants, canals, and destinations of interest.
http://cup.columbia.edu/book/978-0-231-14554-1/the-columbia-gazetteer-of-the-world
Wednesday, September 03, 2008
Library now open 7 days a week!
Monday – Thursday – 8 am – 11 pm
Friday – 8 am – 5 pm
Saturday – 2 pm – 5 pm
Sunday – 4 pm – 11 pm
Please note the library is also now open until 5 on Fridays (versus 4:30 pm).
Library hours vary over University breaks and holidays.
Monday, August 18, 2008
We moved this summer!
First of all, we evaluated books in the reference collection and moved some of them to the open book stacks. That means you can now check out, for example, such resources as the Dictionary of the Middle Ages, the Folklore of American Holidays, the Encyclopedia of Human Emotions and the Encyclopedia of Sports Science. For those of you that require students to use reference books, you might want to double-check the stacks to see what remains. There are still plenty of resources there.
We also moved the oversize books from the north end of the balcony down to the main floor at the beginning of the reference shelving. There are some real treasures in this collection, so check it out.
We then shifted (and vacuumed) every other book in the library. For most books this means they moved several sections from where they were. I know there are some who will need to “re-learn” the location of your favorite section. Believe me when I say that I’m still in the process of relearning where those frequently used sources are…I feel your pain!
We now have a “new” collection in the library called the Curriculum Library. These are textbooks and curriculum guides used in the elementary and secondary schools. You will find these materials on the lower level of the library in the compact shelving.
Have a great school year and come see us in the library.
Wednesday, August 06, 2008
Free netLibrary book for August
"The growth of international trade and investment has brought about many changes in the economies of developing countries, including a move away from state-controlled enterprise. However, it has also made developing countries more vulnerable to new and potentially harmful types of anticompetitive business practices.
Competition and Development: The Power of Competitive Markets demonstrates the importance of true and fair competition to sustainable development and an effective marketplace, touching on issues of globalization, consumer welfare, cartels and monopolies, and trade liberalization. It provides an introduction to competition, and competition law and policy in developing countries. It focuses on the practical problems faced in developing countries and the steps that have been and can be taken to overcome those problems."
To access this online book, go the the library homepage, then choose Online Reference Resources and then netLibrary.
Wednesday, July 02, 2008
Tuesday, July 01, 2008
Free ebook for July
Friday, May 09, 2008
Browse the list of items added during April
Thursday, May 08, 2008
Monday, May 05, 2008
"Enjoy the Break"
Thursday, May 01, 2008
Free ebook on netLibrary
According to the press release from netLibrary, "In The New Paradigm for Financial Markets: The Credit Crisis of 2008 and What It Means, George Soros, the legendary financier, philanthropist and bestselling author, explores the origins of the current financial crisis and its implications for the future. Soros, whose breadth of experience in financial markets is unrivaled, places the current crisis in the context of decades of study of how individuals and institutions handle the boom and bust cycles that now dominate global economic activity. In a concise essay that combines practical insight with philosophical depth, Soros makes an invaluable contribution to our understanding of the great credit crisis and its implications for our nation and the world."
Stoxen Library Drawing Winners
BOOKS
Samantha Kiemele
Alexey Uliyanov
Melissa Pavlicek
Josh Nichols
MUSIC CD’S
Lizette Hunt
Shawna Egli
Lucy Meyer
KEYCHAINS
Alicia Erickson
Lindsey Grooms
David Meier
Briannna Sherman
COFFEE MUG
Amy Haugen
BASKET
Mary Anne Marsh
JUMPDRIVE
Shi Yin
DESK SET
Brian Kopp
Thursday, April 24, 2008
Stoxen Library Extended Hours
Extended Hours
Friday, April 25…….8a.m. – 7 p.m.
Saturday, April 26…. 1p.m. - 5p.m.
Sunday, April 27 ……4 p.m. – 11 p.m.
Friday, May 2……………8a.m. – 7 p.m.
Saturday, May 3…………1p.m. – 5 p.m.
Finals Week Hours
Sunday, May 4…………..4p.m. – 11 p.m.
Monday, May 5...................... 8a.m. – 11:00p.m.
Tuesday, May 6..................... 8a.m. – 11:00p.m.
Wednesday, May 7................ 8a.m. – 11:00p.m.
Thursday, May 8.................... 8a.m. – 11:00p.m.
Friday, May 9......................... 8a.m. – 4:30p.m.
May 12 – August 22
Monday – Friday 8:00a.m. – 4:30p.m.
May 26 – Closed…Memorial Day
July 4 – Closed …Independence Day
Regular Hours
Monday-Thursday 8a.m. – 11p.m.
Friday 8a.m. – 4:30p.m.
Sunday 4p.m. – 11p.m.
Friday, April 18, 2008
Recap of Murder in the Library
We had ten teams of six people each. We used the names from the Clue game and added a few of our own: Colonel Mustard, Mr. Green, Mrs. White, Officer Peach, Instructor Mint, Librarian Azure, Reporter Pink, Detective Rusty, Professor Plum and Miss Scarlet. We then used the colors of each team when we photocopied their clues. We placed the picture of the murderer on the back side of the clues and then cut the clues apart like a puzzle. When each team had collected all of their clues, they then put their puzzle together to solve the crime. We had both the picture of her face and the murderer’s name on the sheet.
Each team had thirteen clues/activities to complete in order to solve the crime including finding a book via ODIN, locating a DVD/video, using various library databases, checking out a reserve item and stopping at the Academic Success Center. In some cases, their next clue was hidden inside something (book, periodical, DVD) and in some cases they reported to “clue stations” to prove they had the necessary information to receive their next clue.
Participants were instructed to bring their flashlights as only a few “necessary” lights were on. They seemed to enjoy the atmosphere of a darkened library and there was a goodly amount of screaming as unsuspecting individuals were grabbed in the stacks or from under a computer. Once the event was underway, there always seemed to be a team running to their next clue.
Prizes were awarded for the top three teams and everyone who participated received a free drink from the coffee bar, an ID holder, certificate of attendance and a set of “Blue Hawk pride” beads.
One of our speech/theater professors (Don Ehli) taped a DVD as Dr. Watson with a clue and then attended the event in costume.
Students really seemed to enjoy the event and are already asking when we will do it again. Several expressed how much fun it was to use the library in this fashion. Some said they enjoyed finding out about resources they had never used before.
The complete slide show of the photos can be seen via the link in the left hand column of this blog.
Thursday, April 17, 2008
North Dakota Reads
Monday, April 14, 2008
National Library Week: College Reference Desk
Library week & Stoxen Library Survey
Click Here to take survey
Friday, April 11, 2008
JSTOR has a new look!
Thursday, April 10, 2008
Murder in the Library - Happening @ Your Library!
Wednesday, April 09, 2008
New books and AV
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Next North Dakota Reads book
The author won the Ernest Hemingway Foundation Award for first fiction, 1995, for The Grass Dancer. The book
The characters are complex and often troubled; they struggle with the magic that swirls around them. Power hits on many aspects of an Indian's life: the gap between Indian and white culture, the problems that arise out of dual heritage, disease, spirits, magic, ancestral powers, religion, and love.
This is a book that can be read at different levels. The first read can be confusing, but a second reading reveals the depth of the work. Through her story, Powers weaves the past, present and future into the present.
Monday, March 24, 2008
Using Wikipedia to reenvision the term paper!
Monday, March 17, 2008
Stoxen Library Easter Recess Hours
Easter Recess Hours
Thursday, March 20 –
Friday, Saturday,
& Sunday – March 21, 22, 23 CLOSED
Monday, March 24 –
Regular Hours
Monday-Thursday
Friday
Sunday
Thursday, March 13, 2008
North Dakota Reads tonight!
Friday, March 07, 2008
The Bones of Plenty
The Bones of Plenty has been described as taking a “brutally accurate” look at the hardships of farm life during the depression. The story is placed near Eureka, North Dakota during 1933-1934. It depicts drought, landlords and bank failures along with the many other daily struggles of farm life. Written as a series of episodes almost like a journal, the book leaves you with a vivid impression of the day to day life experience of the Custer family. Pick up this wonderful book and finish with a greater understanding of the depression years and feeling that you lived for a short while on that farm.
New books and more
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Overcoming Roadblocks to Student Success #2:
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
Stoxen Library Spring Break Hours
Spring Break Hours
Mon. – Fri., March 3 – 7
Sat. March 8 – Closed
Sun. March 9 –
Stoxen Library Regular Hours
Monday-Thursday
Friday
Sunday
Thursday, February 21, 2008
What's new at the library?
Wednesday, Feb. 27 – 3 pm or
Thursday, Feb. 28 – 2 pm
These sessions will be held in the classroom on the lower level of the library. Please RSVP to Eileen (483-2136 or eileen.kopren@dickinsonstate.edu) if you plan to attend.
College Library Website of the Month!
More Opportunities from the ASC
Academic Success Center
Tuesday, February 26th at 1:00 P.M.
Academic Success Center
If you have a class during this time, please feel free to bring the entire class to the workshop. If your class is not at this time, you may still encourage your students to attend. If you would like to offer credit for their attending this workshop but cannot attend yourself, simply contact us at the ASC; we keep attendance rosters to help you determine who form your class attended.
Please reply to tell if your class will attend and how many students you will bring. You may send your reply to Sonja Steffen (ASC Administrative Secretary) at Sonja.Steffen@dickinsonstate.edu or by telephone at 483-2999. We hope to see you at this workshop or at another one soon!
Thursday, February 14, 2008
Fun Valentine's Day Facts
1,198
Number of locations producing chocolate and cocoa products in 2005. These establishments employed 38,718 people. California led the nation in the number of such establishments with 128, followed by Pennsylvania with 121.
26 pounds
Per capita consumption of candy by Americans in 2006.
$411 million
The combined wholesale value of domestically produced cut flowers in 2006 for all flower-producing operations with $100,000 or more in sales. Among states, California was the leading producer, alone accounting for about three-quarters of this amount ($316 million).
6%
The percentage of currently married women who have been married for at least 50 years. Just more than half of currently married women have been married for at least 15 years.
Romantic-sounding places to spend Valentine’s Day:
Roseville, Calif.
Rose City, Mich.
South Heart, N.D.
Loveland, Colo.
Darling township,
Minn.Loveland, Ohio
Romeo, Colo
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
More opportunities from the Academic Success Center
Academic Success Center
Academic Success Center
Academic Success Center
MIND CANDY?
Monday, February 11, 2008
North Dakota Reads tonight!
Library Hours - President's Day Holiday
Stoxen Library Hours
President’s Day Holiday Hours
Saturday Feb. 16 - Closed
Sunday Feb. 17 – Closed
Monday Feb. 18 –
Regular Hours
Monday-Thursday
Friday
Sunday
Friday, February 08, 2008
New Plagiarism DVD
The publisher description recommends a 7 – 12 grade level. However, the “students” interviewed about the consequences of getting caught plagiarizing give college examples (“I lost my scholarship”), so I saw nothing in the DVD that “talks down” to students.
There are a couple of ways that I think this DVD could be used. Because the “chapters” are only about three – four minutes each, one could selectively show one or two for class discussion. We would also be willing to put the DVD on reserve for viewing by a class on their own time.
The call number is: DVD PN167.A96 2004. For a while, it will be displayed with the new DVDs on the cart by the Lower Level Service Desk.
Two New ASC workshops
Academic Success Center
Some of your students might benefit from advice on studying: how to create an environment and to exercise behaviors conducive to concentration while studying. The ASC is offering them some help:
Academic Success Center
If you have a class during this time, please feel free to bring the entire class to the workshop. If your class is not at this time, you may still encourage your students to attend. If you would like to offer credit for their attending this workshop but cannot attend yourself, simply contact us at the ASC; we would gladly provide you with a copy of the attendance roster. Please reply to tell us if your class will attend and how many students you will bring. You may send your reply to Sonja Steffen (ASC Administrative Secretary) at Sonja.Steffen@dickinsonstate.edu or by telephone at 483-2999. We hope to see you at this workshop or at another one soon!
Wednesday, February 06, 2008
Welcome back, Katrina Beaudoin!
Make sure to stop by Stoxen Library and say “hello” to Katrina Beaudoin, who returned this past January. Katrina is our new Circulation Supervisor/ Office Manager and we are glad to have her back! Katrina previously attended DSU for three years and also worked for us as an Evening Supervisor back in 2005 after she returned home from finishing her B.A. in English from the
Katrina is from
If you need to check out any library equipment, she’s the one to help you with that! Have an item to place on Reserve? Stop by and talk with her, she’d be glad to do that for you! Katrina plans to start her master’s degree in Library and Information Science soon, but currently is working full-time for us here at Stoxen, and also part-time at the Dickinson Area Public Library, bringing over ten years of library experience here to help at Stoxen! You may also find her running around outside--Katrina is an avid runner, logging over 6 miles every morning! Welcome back, Katrina!
Where Did Corina Go?
The Library Assistant in Stoxen Library can help you with your Interlibrary Loan needs. You’ll find her busy processing books, collecting stats and compiling work study data in addition to all the services she helped you with as office manager/circulation supervisor.
Monday, February 04, 2008
Check out the new equipment available @ your library!
Now available for checkout at Stoxen Library for classroom/instructional use:
Four Sony Handycam Digital Video Camcorders
These digital video camcorders may be checked out by faculty, students and staff at no charge. Students must have an Equipment Permission Slip signed by their instructor to use the equipment, which is available at Stoxen library or online at http://dickinsonstate.com/pdf/lib_equipment.pdf
Equipment included in checkout:
Case, power adaptor, power cord, USB cable, rechargeable battery, tripod, and AV connection cable. Instruction booklets are available upon request.
Camcorders will take moving, as well as still images, and are recorded onto mini DVD discs, either DVD+R DL, DVD-RW, and DVD+RW. However, Stoxen library does not supply these discs, just the camcorders. Loan period for this equipment is four hours.
Don’t forget to bring your DSU ID along to check out the camcorders and all other library materials. Reservations for equipment are encouraged! For more information, or to place a reservation, call Stoxen Library at 483-2135 today!
Thursday, January 31, 2008
Congratulations, Faith!
On December 17, 2007, S. Faith Wanner graduated from the University of North Texas, Denton, Texas, with a Master’s degree in Library Science. Beginning in fall semester of 2005, she completed the coursework through the Web Institute. Accredited by the American Library Association, the School of Library and Information Sciences prepares “information professionals of the highest quality to serve the state, the region, and the global community.” Faith began working at DSU in 2003. Assuming the position of Head of Technical Services, S Faith is now responsible for collection development, acquisitions, and account management activities, cataloging and classifying all library materials, maintaining the online catalog, coordinating interlibrary loan services, managing online databases, and assisting the Head of Public Services to provide reference and public service to the community.
Thursday, January 24, 2008
7 Things You Should Know About Lulu
The "7 Things You Should Know About..." is a series from EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative that deals with emerging information technologies. Each "brief" focuses on a single technology. Other recent technologies in the series have included Skype, Twitter, Citizen Journalism and Haptics to name a few.
Thursday, January 17, 2008
Love Medicine - review
Louise Erdrich is an excellent writer and she will keep you interested as she portrays the every day life and struggles of these families. Their individual stories are sometimes sad to downright heart-wrenching, but also funny with some dark humor. I will admit that this is not necessarily a "feel-good" read, but I was certainly glad that I did read it and came away feeling I had learned something from it.
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
Here is a session on using the Library homepage that should be useful!
Sessions for Spring Semester:
Jan. 25 (Friday) – 10:00 – 10:50 am
Jan. 29 (Tuesday) – 3:00 – 3:50 pm
Jan. 31 (Thursday) – 2:00 - 2:50 pm
Feb. 6 (Wednesday) – 11:00 – 11:50 am
These sessions are for transfer students, international students, students returning to school after an absence and anyone wanting to see a brief overview of the Library homepage. This does not substitute for the library instruction provided in Freshmen Seminar and Composition 120 classes.
Class sessions are 45 – 50 minutes in length and have a maximum enrollment of 30 students (minimum of 5). Topics covered include a general review of the Library’s webpage, ODIN, accessing one’s library account and Academic Search Premier. Sessions begin at the Library Main Service desk with a 5 minute walk through the library.
New Database: Oxford English Dictionary / OED Online
Features and benefits of OED Online
• Unprecedented access to the 20-volume Second Edition and the three Additions Series volumes, plus at least 1,800 new and revised entries each quarter
• Select how entries are displayed by turning pronunciations, etymologies, variant spellings, and quotations on and off
• Everything from simple word look-ups to sophisticated Boolean searching, using any of the fields in the Dictionary, can be done with speed and ease
• Find a term when you know the meaning but have forgotten the word
• Use wildcards if you are unsure of a spelling, or if you want to search for words with common characteristics
• Search for quotations from a specified year, or from a particular author and/or work
• Search for words which have come into English via a particular language
• Search pronunciations as well as accented and other special characters
• Search for first cited date, authors, and works
• Search for words with a particular part of speech
• Perform case-sensitive searches
• Restrict a search to a previous results set
• Compare revised entries with entries from the Second Edition to see how the language has changed and how new scholarship has increased understanding of our linguistic and cultural heritage.
Take a fully-illustrated tour or check out the word of the day.
Available to you 24/7 from your library.
Overcoming Roadblocks to Student Success
Overcoming Roadblocks to Student Success
RSVP by Friday, January 18 in order to reserve a meal at this workshop luncheon. You may respond to Sonja Steffen (ASC Administrative Secretary) by e-mail at Sonja.Steffen@DickinsonState.edu or by telephone at 483-2999. We look forward to having you join us and our continuing conversation about teaching and learning at DSU.
Wednesday, January 09, 2008
Stoxen Library Hours
Saturday, Jan. 19- closed
Sunday, Jan. 20 – closed
Monday, Jan. 21 – 4:00pm – 11p.m.
Regular Hours
Monday-Thursday 8 a.m. – 11 p.m.
Friday 8 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.
Sunday 4 p.m. – 11 p.m.