Thank you for taking the time to fill out our survey. The winner will be contacted by email after April 20, 2012.
Concordia Library News & Events
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Win a Kobo E-Reader: Take Concordia Library's Student Survey
We want to know what you think about Concordia Library's services, collections and facilities. Give us 5 minutes of your time and you can enter your name in a draw for a Kobo e-reader. Just click on the link and tell us what you think: Please click here to fill out the 2012 Concordia Library Student Satisfation survey
Provincial Election Information
Getting ready to vote? Visit Elections Alberta to learn more about the candidates and voting process.
Turtles and Horror - oh my!
Putting out some new stuff on the book display and a few titles caught my eye:
Life
in a shell : a physiologist's view of a turtle by Donald C Jackson
QL 666 C5 J28 2011
|
Extraordinary
evil : a brief history of genocide by Barbara Coloroso
HV 6322.7 C64 2007
A
history of horror by Wheeler W Dixon
PN 1995.9 H6 D59 2010
Extended Exam Hours April 2012
Extended Exam Hours - April 2012
In addition to our normal weekday hours ( Mon-Thu 7:45 am - 9pm, Fri 7:45am - 5pm) we have added extra weekend hours:
Saturday the 19th 8am - 7pm
Sunday the 20th 10am - 7pm
See you there!
In addition to our normal weekday hours ( Mon-Thu 7:45 am - 9pm, Fri 7:45am - 5pm) we have added extra weekend hours:
Saturday the 19th 8am - 7pm
Sunday the 20th 10am - 7pm
See you there!
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
The Cataloguer's New Book Picks
Students in
the Earth Science 102 class may be interested in some new library
resources that may be helpful with their biomes assignment.
Grassland productivity and ecosystem services / edited by
Gilles Lemaire, John Hodgson, Abad Chabbi
QH
541.5 P7 G7128 2011
Sand dunes : conservation, types and desertification /
Jessica A. Murphy, editor
QH 88.5
S26 2011
Biodiversity Hotspots : distribution and protection of
conservation priority areas / editors: Frank E. Zachos, Jan Christian Habel
QH 75
B538 2011
Field guide to freshwater invertebrates of North America /
James H. Thorp, D. Christopher Rogers
QL
365.4 A1 T44 2011
Drought and aquatic ecosystems : effects and responses / P.
Sam Lake
QH 541
L35 2011
Thursday, February 16, 2012
Sunday, February 12, 2012
Go on a Blind Date with a Book
Go on a Blind Date with a book from the concordia Library.
The books are all dressed up and ready to be taken out. What will you get - mystery? history? Who knows! Take a chance and see.
Let us know how your date went by posting to the library blog, Facebook, or @librarycuca Twitter feed. Or simply fill out a Rate Your Date form, included with each Blind Date book.
The books are all dressed up and ready to be taken out. What will you get - mystery? history? Who knows! Take a chance and see.
Let us know how your date went by posting to the library blog, Facebook, or @librarycuca Twitter feed. Or simply fill out a Rate Your Date form, included with each Blind Date book.
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Primary Resources About Slavery
Looking for Primary Resources about the history of slavery? Look at the Slavery, Abolition, and Social Justice database of primary resources from 1490-2007.
If you are connecting from off-campus your User ID is the barcode from your ID card and your PIN is the last 4 digits of your student ID number
If you are connecting from off-campus your User ID is the barcode from your ID card and your PIN is the last 4 digits of your student ID number
Monday, January 16, 2012
Lives of Girls and Women - Resources
Looking for info on Alice Munro's "Lives of Girls and Women"? Use Concordia Library E-Resources:
1) From the library homepage ,click on the E-Resources tab and choose English & Writing from the drop down menu (don't forget to hit the GO button)
2) Click on the link to the Literary Reference Center. If you are off-campus, log in with your library barcode and PIN. Search for Lives of Girls and Women (choose AT Title of Work from the drop-down menu to get the best results.) Click on Full-text or Where can I find this to locate the article you are interested in.
3) Go back to the English & Writing E-Resources page and click on the link to the
1) From the library homepage ,click on the E-Resources tab and choose English & Writing from the drop down menu (don't forget to hit the GO button)
2) Click on the link to the Literary Reference Center. If you are off-campus, log in with your library barcode and PIN. Search for Lives of Girls and Women (choose AT Title of Work from the drop-down menu to get the best results.) Click on Full-text or Where can I find this to locate the article you are interested in.
3) Go back to the English & Writing E-Resources page and click on the link to the
Literature Resource Center. Search for Lives of Girls and Women (choose Name of Work from the options below the search box.) When the results appear, look at the tabs across the top of the page - the one marked Topic & Work Overviews has an entry from Novels for Students that provides a great introduction. The Criticism tab will have more in-depth information. Again, click on the Full-Text link to read the article.
4) Check in with the Library Info Desk staff if you would like help with any of these steps or for more research assistance. Contact us via email, telephone, or instant messaging.
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
BioOne goes mobile
"BioOne
is pleased to announce the official launch of BioOne Mobile, an
optimized website now available to smartphone users. With this new mobile
interface, all content from BioOne's 167 journals and book series is available
for easy access to faculty, students, and researchers via their iPhone,
Android, and Blackberry smartphones.
Because
BioOne's optimization is site-wide, there is no app to download or keep
updated. Instead, users will be automatically directed to BioOne's mobile site
whenever they access bioone.org
from a compatible mobile device. Users accessing the site from an iPad or
tablet are shown the full site for optimal viewing, but can select the mobile
site if they prefer.
Just
as on the full BioOne site, users are able to access abstracts and the full
text of open access articles without a subscription. Users can also access
their account profiles; execute complex searches, sorting by most-recent,
most-downloaded, or most-cited articles; and save PDFs for future access.
Users
associated with an institutional subscription can easily pair their device with
their university's access privileges, giving them access to all subscribed
content, whether they are in the library or on-the-go.
BioOne
has created a number of resources to assist libraries and researchers using BioOne
Mobile. Please visit the Mobile
Resources section on our site for more information."
From the Nov. 28 email to customers from BioOne's Marketing Director Nicole Colovos
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