We already subscribe to PsycINFO and PsycARTICLES through EBSCO, but are trialing them through ProQuest to see how the search, linking, and interface stack up. Let us know what you think!
Trial ends: September 16th
Send feedback and other trial ideas to reference@csp.edu.
Direct URL: http://ezproxy.csp.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/?accountid=26720&selectids=1007567,1007458
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
Thursday, August 15, 2013
New subscription to ScienceDirect adds full-text access to over 1,100 high impact, academic journals in the Health and Life Sciences
Available immediately, the library has added the ScienceDirect Health and Life Sciences Collection. This new subscription contains high-impact, full-text, academic journals in the health and life sciences, environmental science, and the behavioral sciences.
There is no full-text limiter via the ScienceDirect interface. Look for the PDF icon when accessing via the ScienceDirect database and for "View Now" icons when searching in WorldCat Local.
Direct URL: http://ezproxy.csp.edu/login?url=http://www.sciencedirect.com
There is no full-text limiter via the ScienceDirect interface. Look for the PDF icon when accessing via the ScienceDirect database and for "View Now" icons when searching in WorldCat Local.
Direct URL: http://ezproxy.csp.edu/login?url=http://www.sciencedirect.com
Friday, August 9, 2013
Surprising trends in electronic publishing
Several months back, it was noted on
this blog that e-book growth seemed to be stalling significantly. Culture and technology watcher Nicholas Carr, in his post The flattening of e-book sales,
notes that the trend continues:
“The Association of American Publishers reports that in the first quarter of 2013, e-book sales in the U.S. trade market grew by just 5 percent over where they were in the same period in 2012. The explosive growth of the last few years has basically petered out, according to the AAP numbers (see graph)”
In another surprise, the Wall Street Journal recently
reported about The
New Explosion in Audio Books:
“Audio books have gone mass-market. Sales have jumped by double digits in recent years. Shifts in digital technology have broadened the pool of potential listeners to include anyone with a smartphone.”
The detailed article also reports on some of the unique approaches
of some of the newer audiobooks, including the creation of works that feature
only as audiobooks, “ranging from full-cast dramatizations in the style of old
school radio plays, complete with music and sound effects, to young adult
novels, thrillers and multipart science fiction epics.” Other innovations include the ability for
persons to switch between an e-book and the audio version, picking up the story
in either fashion wherever they left off.
As such, the article also
explores how, for many, the line between listening to a book and reading it is
disappearing.
Also worthy of note for academic libraries: even as many academic
libraries move to make serious academic books available through e-book
databases, the Chronicle of Higher Education reports that Students
Prefer Print for Serious Academic Reading.
Reasons given for this are the distraction caused by embedded links, an
inability to interact with the content as easily as printed texts, and perhaps,
the students report, not having used e-books when they were younger.
___________________________
Graph from Nicholas Carr’s blog: http://www.roughtype.com/?p=3590
Audiobook image from here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/74109564@N08/8119732223 By Nicola Einarson
Studying image from here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/merchau/8548057127 by merchau
Friday, July 26, 2013
Let’s Talk About It: Muslim Journeys

All of the Muslim Journeys events below will be held in Concordia University’s Buenger Education Center.
1.
September
26, 2013, 7:00 pm: Immigrants and Spiritual Pluralism in America and The Experiences of a Muslim Immigrant.
Dr. Butler, author of Religion
in Colonial America, will provide us with historical background on the development
of religion in America. He reminds us
that we as a people have always been religiously diverse; religious pluralism
is a central part of what defines us as Americans. As each new wave of immigrants settled in our
communities, new challenges for understanding these new belief systems
presented themselves. The First
Amendment and the unique protection it provides nurtured a “spiritual pluralism
unlike that found in any society on either side of the Atlantic or Pacific” (Religion in America, p. 141).
Dr. Bruce Corrie will then present a few demographic
highlights of immigrants in our own community.
Dr. Corrie will then introduce Dr. Odeh Muhawesh, CEO and successful
business leader from Plymouth, Minnesota, will then tell of his experiences as
a new immigrant to the Twin Cities. Over
the past 26 years, Dr. Muhawesh has founded several very successful businesses
and established a strong record of growing revenue and developing competitive
products for software and service companies.
He holds a Ph.D. in Comparative Theology from International Theological
Seminary, specializes in theology and modern Middle Eastern history, teaches at
the University of St. Thomas and is an associate of their Muslim-Christian
Dialogue Center.
The remaining programs
will be book-talks based on the following titles. Dr. Debra Beilke and/or Professor Theresa
FitzPatrick will introduce the book with a short summary and a few readings
followed by an opportunity for us to discuss the book. When possible, this will be followed by the
personal story of an immigrant from a Muslim county and/or a panel discussion
by our students.
3.
November
12, 7:00 pm: Persepolis: The Story of aChildhood, by Marjane Satrapi
4.
February
11, 2014 7:00 pm: House of Stone: A Memoir of Home, Family, and a Lost Middle East, by Anthony Shadid
5.
March
5, 10:30 am: BrokenVerses, by Kamila Shamsie
6.
April
8, 7:00 pm: Dreams of Trespass: Tales of a Harem Girlhood,
by Fatima Mernissi
For more information, see this link: http://libraryguides.csp.edu/muslimjourneysbooks
Friday, July 19, 2013
Recent court decisions of interest to libraryland
Updates on some recent court decisions:
The Google Books
lawsuit: Years ago, Google started
the “Google Books” project, an effort to scan 130 million books from libraries
worldwide by 2020 (you can read more about it and its relevance to libraries here). There was no controversy about Google
scanning pre-1923 books no longer under copyright, but some objected to Google
scanning out-of-print books that were still protected by copyright law. Just recently, “a panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York said
Circuit Judge Denny Chin prematurely certified a class of authors without first
deciding if the ‘fair use’ defense under U.S. copyright law allowed Google to
display snippets of books.” (from
Reuters) John Dvorak, writing at PCMag.com, comments: “This
is not over yet. The Author's Guild is going to sue Google over the fair use
standard. This should, once and for all, give us some definitions of fair use
that we can all benefit from. As far as the Author's Guild is concerned Google
abuses its scans by letting people read snippets of the copyrighted books.”
(link to his piece here)
Apple E-Book lawsuit:
Not long ago, Amazon.com had priced new
e-Books at $9.99, and had a virtual monopoly on the e-Book market. This led Apple to work with publishers so
they could overcome this advantage using an “agency [pricing] model”
(mentioned on this blog here).
Just recently, the U.S. District Judge
Denise Cote in Manhattan “sided with government regulators' contention that
Apple joined five major book publishers to gang up [on] Amazon.com in a
price-fixing conspiracy that caused consumers to pay more for electronic books.” Words of the late Steve Jobs influenced the
federal judge in determining that “Apple Inc. milked the popularity of its
iTunes store to form an illegal cartel with publishers to raise electronic book
prices.” (from the
A.P.) Apple denies any wrongdoing,
and Ankur Kapoor,
antitrust lawyer for the law firm
Constantine Cannon, thinks Apple may win its appeal. He contends that Jobs
may have simply understood the industry dynamics and cut smart deals – and that
he did not necessarily get all the publishers to agree to raise prices, a
practice known as "horizontal price fixing" (from A.P. article and Joab
Jackson at Computerworld.com)
Image credit:
Articles linked to in
post:
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
Using PubMed? Enter From The CSP Library Site To Take Advantage Of Our Full-Text Holdings
PubMed is a great place to do research on medical and health sciences topics. The PubMed interface provides a lot of added value with its Related Citations area and its use of MeSH Subject Headings, which provide a controlled vocabulary that you can use to conduct more thorough and authoritative searches. But there are also many links that are unclear, difficult to understand, and which lead to dead ends or sites asking you to pay for content. You don't have to pay for the content! And now, the CSP Library offers integration with its full text holdings on every single PubMed citation in the form of our Get It button:
When you hit the Get It button, the citation you're interested in will be searched against our full text holdings for a match. When a match is found, a link to the article will be provided. When no match is found, use the "Request via InterLibrary Loan" link to place a request via a prepopulated form which our InterLibrary Loan staff will work to fill from surrounding libraries. InterLibrary Loan requires a one-time registration process the first time you use it.
Most importantly, in order to search in an environment which has this CSP-specific functionality, you must use the link for PubMed provided at the Library's Website!!! It is a custom URL which includes info which identifies us to PubMed and includes our Get It button. Find it on our Databases lists and in our Health and Science Subject Guides.
The direct URL is: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?otool=mncustplib
Look for the following button in the top right corner of your screen:
When you hit the Get It button, the citation you're interested in will be searched against our full text holdings for a match. When a match is found, a link to the article will be provided. When no match is found, use the "Request via InterLibrary Loan" link to place a request via a prepopulated form which our InterLibrary Loan staff will work to fill from surrounding libraries. InterLibrary Loan requires a one-time registration process the first time you use it.
Most importantly, in order to search in an environment which has this CSP-specific functionality, you must use the link for PubMed provided at the Library's Website!!! It is a custom URL which includes info which identifies us to PubMed and includes our Get It button. Find it on our Databases lists and in our Health and Science Subject Guides.
The direct URL is: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?otool=mncustplib
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