IEEE Xplore Temporarily Unavailable via Webproxy
Posted: May 23rd, 2013Access to IEEE Xplore is temporarily unavailable via the Queen’s webproxy.
Access to IEEE Xplore is temporarily unavailable via the Queen’s webproxy.
The Library and Archives Master Plan (LAMP) Steering Group invites everyone in the Queen’s community to attend an open information session on Friday, April 26 at 11:00 in Robert Sutherland Hall, Room 202. Attendees will learn more about the LAMP project including preliminary options that are being considered. The steering group’s planning partner, CS&P Architects, will give an overview of the work done to date, the feedback the group has received, and present the preliminary planning concepts and drawings for Stauffer and Douglas libraries. Visit the LAMP website to learn more about the project, to view the initial drawings and to share your feedback with the LAMP project team.
The Adaptive Technology Centre in the Queen’s Learning Commons has been featured in an article in the Kingston Whig-Standard. The article, entitled “Challenging, Rewarding, Fascinating,” notes that “The Adaptive Technology Centre is a library within a library that gives students with disabilities or special requirements a chance to learn in a way that meets their own needs.” Michele Chittenden, the Coordinator for Library Services for Students with Disabilities, speaks of the rewards of the work she and the ATC staff do in helping students, not only through converting materials into accessible formats, as library technician Carol Tennant does, and determining the best technologies to meet student needs, as adaptive technologist Andrew Ashby does, but by being a supportive and inviting environment for the students who use their services. The article notes that Queen’s Library was at the forefront of establishing services for students with disabilities and the service led to the Library receiving the Canadian Association of College and University Libraries award for innovation in 1994. Recently, Michele was named as a member of the Association of Research Libraries’ Working Group on Accessibility and Universal Design. ARL is an association of 125 research libraries across North America.
Two Queen’s librarians will lead a workshop at the Learning Outcomes Assessment, Practically Speaking Symposium, co-sponsored by the Council of Ontario Universities and being held in Toronto on April 22 & 23, 2013. Cory Laverty, Head of the Education Library, and Nasser Saleh, Head of the Engineering and Science Library, will provide a workshop entitled “Designing Rubrics for Inquiry-Based Learning: Addressing Process and Product.” The workshop will examine an inquiry-based assignment in the social sciences and work backwards to create an analytic marking rubric that aligns with learning outcomes.
A review of the University’s Records Management Program is involving experienced colleagues from Dartmouth College and Simon Fraser University who will visit campus on April 16th and 17th. The purpose of the review is to assess the University’s current records management practices and provide advice for the future.
Ian Forsyth is the University Archivist and Information and Privacy Coordinator at Simon Fraser University. He previously held positions as Deputy Archivist for Ontario and was the first FOI/Privacy Coordinator at the Archives of Ontario. Before that he worked both as a government records and private manuscript archivist. Ian has over twenty-five years experience developing, implementing and managing archival, information management and access and privacy programs. At SFU he is responsible for the University’s corporate archives, its records management program and coordinating copyright administration as well as operational activities that enable compliance with BC’s information and privacy law.
Wess Jolley is the Records Manager of Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, a position he has held since 1994. He is a Records and Information Management professional with over 30 years of experience in higher education and non-profit environments. Prior to Dartmouth College he worked as Records Manager for the University of Utah, and as the Resource and Data Management Coordinator for the California Child, Youth and Family Coalition, as well as in private consulting and data system design for the non-profit sector in California. In his current position at Dartmouth College, Wess is responsible for managing both a traditional records center for physical records, and moving Dartmouth towards Enterprise Content and Enterprise Records Management systems and workflows. He has been a Certified Records Manager (CRM) since 2001.
The reviewers will be meeting with numerous individuals involved in various aspects of records management and university governance, including staff in academic units and administrative units. The review will apply an understanding of best practices in records management at institutions external to Queen’s, and assess Queen’s records management program’s strengths, areas for improvement and opportunities for enhancements, in consultation with stakeholders. The result will be recommendations regarding the governance, management and operations of Queen’s records management program.
For background information on the review, please see: https://wiki.queensu.ca/x/jZTuB
Questions or comments may be directed to the review team by contacting Lindsay Campbell.
Many Library locations are offering extended opening hours during the exam period. Stauffer Library is open 24 hours a day until April 27. To see the hours and real-time opening status for all Library facilities, check the Hours page.
A set of proposed key principles and ideas to guide the development of the libraries and archives has been drafted by the Library and Archives Master Plan (LAMP) team. As well, high level drawings of Stauffer and Douglas libraries provide a first iteration of the emerging planning concepts that the LAMP team is considering. “I hope that these drawings and the key concepts that inform them will generate ideas and feedback from across the university,” says Martha Whitehead, University Librarian. “They are the result of our extensive consultation and information gathering process.” The planning team is focusing first on Stauffer and Douglas libraries and from the wealth of information gathered thus far, a number of key concepts have emerged. The LAMP drawings and key concepts, along with information boards about the campus master plan, are now on display on the first floor of Stauffer library. Everyone is encouraged to view them at the library or online, and to visit the LAMP website to submit your feedback. Over the course of April Ms. Whitehead and the other members of the LAMP project team will continue the consultation process as they meet with several student, faculty and staff groups. Everyone is invited to attend and ask questions at an upcoming information session on the LAMP project on Friday, April 26 from 11-11:45 am in Robert Sutherland Hall, room 202.
Queen’s University Library is one of 10 early-adopting university libraries in Ontario to acquire a new ebook collection of books published by Canada’s university presses, including McGill-Queen’s University Press. Thanks to a partnership between the Ontario Council of University Libraries (OCUL) and eBOUND, and in conjunction with the Association of Canadian University Presses, over 3,000 ebooks will be available online through OCUL’s Scholars Portal platform. Jane Philipps, Coordinator of Collection Development, notes that Queen’s Library does not currently own the majority of these books and that “this agreement will give our users much greater access to recent Canadian scholarship.” For more information, see the Queen’s University press release.
A special issue of Nature looks at the transformation taking place in scientific publishing. Available at:
http://www.nature.com/news/specials/scipublishing/index.html
The library now has access to the Springer 2013 E-Books for the following subject areas:
Behavioral Science
Biomedical and Life Science
Business and Economics
Chemistry and Materials Science
Computer Science
Earth and Environmental Science
Engineering
Humanities, Social Science & Law
Mathematics and Statistics
Medicine
Physics and Astronomy
Professional and Applied Computing
The agreement also includes access back to 1997 for the following series:
Advances in Biochemical Engineering/Biotechnology
Advances in Polymer Science
Progress in Colloid and Polymer Science
Structure & Bonding
Topics in Current Chemistry
Topics in Heterocyclic Chemistry
Topics in Organometallic Chemistry
IFIP International Federation for Information Processing
Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Lecture Notes in Earth Sciences
The Handbook of Environmental Chemistry
Lecture Notes in Control and Information Sciences
Springer Tracts in Advanced Robotics
Studies in Computational Intelligence
Studies in Fuzziness and Soft Computing
Lecture Notes in Mathematics
Advances in Solid State Physics
Lecture Notes in Physics
Springer Series in Optical Sciences
Springer Tracts in Modern Physics
Understanding Complex Systems
NATO Science for Peace and Security