Showing posts with label library resources. Show all posts
Showing posts with label library resources. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Top Ten Tuesday: The Top Ten Horror Novels and Stories

Since Halloween is just a couple of weeks away, you might be in the mood to read something scary. According to The Top Tens (a website where Internet users can create and vote on top ten lists on a wide variety of topics) these are the top ten horror novels and stories:  

1. The Tell-Tale Heart by Edgar Allen Poe. Available in the library in the Norton Anthology of Short Fiction

Poe in 1849.
This work is in the public domain.
2. Misery by Stephen King. Available in the library. 

3. Cujo by Stephen King. Available in the library. 

4. The Black Cat by Edgar Allen Poe. Available in the library in the Ghostly Tales and Eerie Poems of Edgar Allen Poe

5. The Pit and the Pendulum by Edgar Allen Poe. Available in the library in the Ghostly Tales and Eerie Poems of Edgar Allen Poe

6. They Thirst by Robert McCammon

7. The Cellar by Richard Laymon

8. Pet Sematary by Stephen King

9. It by Stephen King

10. Incarnate by Ramsey Campbell



The bottom five aren't currently available in the library. However, you can use our interlibrary loan service to request them. Or you could get a TexShare card from us and use it to borrow them from another library. Or you could use the suggest a purchase form if you think we should add these books to our collection.

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

July New Books

Each month the Dick Smith Library adds new books to its shelves. The books range from several topics which typically align with Tarleton State University's curriculum. 

Here's a look at a few new books that hit our shelves last month, July:


Book Cover from Amazon.com


Latinos and American Popular Culture  Patricia M. Montilla, editor.

General Stacks: E184.S75 L3674 2013










Book Cover from Amazon.com



A Will to Believe : 
Shakespeare and Religion 

David Scott Kastan

General Stacks: PR3011 .K37 2014






Book Cover from Amazon.com




Open Standards and the Digital Age : History, Ideology, and Networks

Andrew L. Russell

General Stacks: T59.2.U6 R87 2014







Book Cover from Amazon.com


Masterpieces : Early Medieval Art 

Sonja Marzinzik

General Stacks:

 N5964.G7 M37 2013





If you're interested in these books and would like to know about other books/e-books/audio books/etc.  that we've recently added, check out our New Books and Resources page. 

Also, if you need assistance in finding these books on the shelf and checking them out contact 
the Reference Desk located in the Library Learning Commons:
(254)968-9249

Friday, June 6, 2014

Tarleton Libraries: Year(s) in Review

You may have heard about the Library Chronicles but do you know what it is?

Library Chronicles is a newsletter magazine published annually by the library's Marketing and Outreach Committee which spotlights events and happenings that have occurred within the library for the specific newsletter's year. Basically, if you've ever wondered what goes on at the library you can find the answer within the Library Chronicles' pages.

The newsletter contains interesting facts about the library and its staff members as well as fun images of events that happen on all the Tarleton campuses.

Check out the Library Chronicles' archive to review the last four years.
http://www.tarleton.edu/library/chronicles.html

Find out about our READ poster reveal, social media accounts, contributions to the campus and surrounding community, and more!

Want more information about the Library Chronicles?

Contact the library's 
Marketing and Outreach Co-Chairs:

Cathy Wilterding
254-968-9456.

Kym Schow
254-968-9871

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

New Database: Garland Encyclopedia of World Music

Are you a Music major? Maybe you're a music fan? 

Tarleton Libraries has a new database called Garland Encyclopedia of World Music located on the A-Z Database List

Garland Encyclopedia of World Music Volume 8: Europe ed. Rice, Timothy, Porter, James & Goertzen, Chris
With this database, you can explore several types of music from all over the world.

You can also create "play lists" which are themed collections of materials and can be created by any user of the database.

Users can create play lists containing various types of documents, images, whole videos, tracks, segments (clips) and/or other items such as links to any URL.

Play lists can be annotated, edited, copied, shared, and all play lists contain their own unique static URL. Play lists can be used as lists of personal favorites, class viewing/listening assignments, or as a teaching resource for in-class use.

Check it out and let us know what you think! 

Need assistance? 

Contact us: 
(254)968-9249 or reference@tarleton.edu 


Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Top 10 Tuesday - Twelve Library Resources & Services

Welcome (back, to you returning students)!  Here, in no particular order, is a list of ten things (plus a bonus two) the library has to help make your semester a success. Note that some resources have been relocated from their original locations during our Learning Commons renovation project.
mobile whiteboard
collaboration table
presentation practice room
Have a GREAT semester, and please remember the library is here to help you! The library is open 101 hours per week (more during finals and the week before them).  You may get help and ask questions in person at the library, by phone at 254-968-9249, by email at reference@tarleton.edu, or via the web at http://www.tarleton.edu/~library/askaref.html.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Need Help on the Upper Level of the Library? You're In Luck

Have you ever found yourself lost upstairs in the library's stacks? Or maybe you're working on a paper on one of our computers upstairs and realize you need assistance finding more sources but don't want leave your work unattended? 

We have you covered!

Did you know we have a reference desk upstairs which is staffed by professional librarians and library staff throughout various times of the day?

Don't be afraid to visit us at the desk; we would be happy to help you with any questions you may have, such as:

  • password assistance
  • locating a book
  • searching the academic databases
  • computer and printing questions
  • citation assistance
  • and more!

Need help upstairs but there's no one at the desk? 

Feel free to use the phone and dial 9249.

On the go and need assistance?

Contact us via phone or email:

(254) 968-9249
 reference@tarleton.edu   
                                                

                                          

As always, we're happy to assist you in any of your endeavors. 

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

New Resources!

The library has three new resources!  They have been added to our list of databases.
  • Job & Career Accelerator -- interest assessment, career exploration, resume builder and job search platform.
  • LearningExpress Library -- practice tests & interactive skill building tutorials. Prepare for the GED, as well as professional certification, licensing, and aptitude tests in civil service, law enforcement, firefighting, EMS, military, real estate,and healthcare. Prepare for college and graduate school admissions tests including the SAT, ACT, GMAT, GRE, LSAT, and MCAT.
  • NBC Learn Higher Ed -- thousands of videos, historic newsreels, primary source documents, and  photographs from NBC News.
Please give these resources a try. Find them userful?  Not your cup of tea?  Post a comment and share.  Feedback on the usefulness of any database is appreciated!

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Top Ten Tuesday - Top Ten Databases

Now that classes have started again here is a list of the top ten databases of the more than 200 databases that the Dick Smith library has available. The figures come from actual use statistics and reflect actual use by students.
The databases are:
1. The Library Catalog
2. Discovery
3. Academic Search Complete
4. EBSCO Databases
5. JStor
6. Metalib Subjects
7. SFX Titles
8. Business Source Complete
9. Proquest
10. CINAHL Full Text-(Nursing)
So there are the top ten databases, but remember if you can't find what you need ask a librarian.

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Dick Smith Library Can Help You Get What You Need

In addition to the useful library resources and services described in yesterday's post, the library strives to help you get what you need when you need it:
Remember, we're here to help you and glad to do so.  Just give a call (254-968-9249), send an email (reference@tarleton.edu), or stop by (hours).  You can also check in with the library through various social media venues (linked from the library's homepage).

Dick Smith Library staff wishes you an excellent Spring 2013 semester.

    Tuesday, January 15, 2013

    Top Ten Tuesday - Library Resources & Services

    Welcome back!  Here is a list of ten things (in no particular order) the library has to help make your semester a success.
    charging station
    new die cut machine
    comb binding machine
    Have a GREAT semester, and please remember the library is here to help you! The library is open 101 hours per week (more during finals and the week before them).  You may get help and ask questions in person at the library, by phone at 254-968-9249, by email at reference@tarleton.edu, or via the web at http://www.tarleton.edu/~library/askaref.html

    Wednesday, October 17, 2012

    Homecoming and More in the Library

    Tarleton is "Celebrating 100 years of the Tarleton Alumni Association" during Homecoming Week 2012. We kicked off the week with Midnight Madness on Sunday, Silver Bugle Hunt on Monday, and the Purple Out Picnic last night. Tonight we will have Yell Contest followed by the Snake Dance and the beginning of Beating the Drums. Midnight Breakfast is tomorrow night, Bonfire on Friday, and the Homecoming ParadeQueen Crowning & Game on Saturday (Texans vs. Kingsville @ 6pm).

    Photo by: Tracy Holtman
    Where does the Library fit into all of this, you might be thinking? Well, the Library has put together a Homecoming display to add to the festivities. We used Homecoming issues of the JTAC, opened Grassburrs to the Homecoming pages and proudly displayed the Purple & White. You can come to the Library and discover what previous Homecoming events were like, who was crowned Homecoming Queen, and if the Texans won their game.

    Tuesday, April 3, 2012

    Did You Know?

    The library is always coming up with new resources for you. Here's a few.

    Friday, January 20, 2012

    Rodeo, the Library Way

    How much does rodeo have to do with the library? A lot, especially here at Tarleton and at other colleges too. A walk through the library stacks to GV1834.5 .M35 2004 will put the book College Rodeo: from Show to Sport into your hands. Rodeo has been a long-standing tradition for Tarleton since 1947. Tarleton has won six national championships and 19 individual national championships.

    Fort Worth also has a long-standing tradition of rodeo. This year’s Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo (FWSSR) opened in January for the 116th time. One January day about five years ago, I was driving through downtown Fort Worth when I came up behind two riders on horses merrily trotting along on Main Street. I was taken back to my childhood when my family attended the rodeo every year.

    My most favorite memory was standing on the rail as the celebrity performer circled the stadium floor riding a horse shaking hands with all the kids. I remember that Ken Curtis who played “Festus” from the popular, long-running TV show, Gunsmoke shook my hand as I teetered on the rail.

    In case you are too young to remember Gunsmoke you can discover more by checking out this book: Gunsmoke: a Complete History and Analysis of the Legendary Broadcast Series with a Comprehensive Episode-by-Episode Guide to Both the Radio and Television Programs by SuzAnne Barabas.

    I loved the flare of the grand entrance at the beginning of the rodeo. Riders with brilliantly colored shirts and sparkling belt buckles paraded in serpentine fashion across the floor of Will Rogers Coliseum displaying flags to show our state and national pride. Hundreds of riders decked out in the fanciest clothes riding well-groomed, show horses paraded by.

    The events of the rodeo: barrel races and bull-riding fascinated me. Cowgirls rode wildly fast around barrels with their horses throwing clods of dirt onto the audience. The crowds hollered loudly cheering them on. Enjoy discovering more about cowgirls by opening up Tarleton’s electronic book, Rodeo Queens: On the Circuit with America’s Cowgirls by Joan Burbick.

    Bull-riding was saved as the final event. I watched through my fingers a rider climbed aboard an almost 3,000 pound bull who was knocking against the board of the pen ready to be released from the belt that was tightened around its middle. The rider stayed on for only seconds, but it seemed an eternity to me as I watch him hang on to the undulating mass of hide, horns, and fury. Watch for yourself by checking out the video, Awesome Bullrides available in the library.

    The brave rodeo clown distracted the bull by putting himself in between the dismounting cowboy and the bull. I recall watching the bull lower his head to charge the clown who narrowly escaped those horns by running for the barrel and slipping inside milliseconds before the bull was there. Even now as I think of these events, my heart beats just a little faster, and I find myself feeling the fear that I had of the clown not making it into the barrel in time.

    You can read your way through the history of rodeo clowns by checking out the library’s electronic copy of Fearless Funnymen: the History of the Rodeo Clown by Gail Woerner.

    My childhood days of rodeo nights usually ended with my Dad carrying me out while I looked back over his shoulder into the stadium still filled with dust floating in the air and dirt divoted by hundreds of hooves traversing the surface throughout the evening. I’m looking forward to once again making more nostalgic memories as I visit the Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo this season. Take your own walk down memory lane through checking out the library’s book, Stock Photographs: The Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo by Garry Winogrand.

    Friday, November 18, 2011

    NaNoWriMo 2011

    If you don't know what National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) is, check out this post Thomas wrote about it last year. With slightly under two weeks left, a lot of NaNoWriMo participants have probably fallen behind, but there's still hope left! If you need help figuring out what to do next with your characters and story, there are resources on fiction writing at the library that might help you out. If you need help finding those resources, here are a few tips and links:
    Keep in mind that no one is grading you on your NaNoWriMo writing. Just try to write as much as you can each day, and remember that you can revise your work, if you'd like, after NaNoWriMo is over.

    Good luck!

    Tuesday, July 26, 2011

    Top Ten Tuesday: 10 Most used Library Databases

    Our Library has 204 databases that were searched more than 2 million times last year!   Here is a list of the 10 most searched databases.  Which one is your favorite?  As budgets get tight, IF we were to think of dropping one of the less used resource list on our databases page, which one would YOU save?
    • Academic Search Complete
    • Business Source Complete 
    • MasterFile Premier
    • PsychINFO
    • Psychology and Behavior Science Collection
    • Education Research Complete
    • PsychArticles
    • JSTOR
    • ERIC
    • CINAHL

    Tuesday, January 18, 2011

    Top 10 Tuesday - 10 things to start the semester

    Welcome back!  The first day of the semester and the library is already busy with students.  Here is a list of 10 things (some new!) the library has to offer to help make your semester a success. 
    • Library Catalog - with a new look and added functionality - bookmarks and permalinks
    • help with user names and passwords - in person at the library or try the online guide
    • Databases - over 170 online resources for research with links to full-texts articles available 24/7
    • iPhone app - you can do research right from your phone! 
    • Rosetta Stone - New! featuring 25 different languages (ask at the circulation desk)
    • AP Style guide - new resource from the Associated Press
    • Ask a Librarian! - we are here to help
    • LibX toolbar - direct access to the Tarleton Libraries resources when searching the web
    • Google Scholar - helps you find scholarly literature; the Tarleton library helps you access it!
    • Computers - the library has over 170 machines available. Now with card readers on the upper and lower floors of the library.
    I hope everyone has a GREAT semester.  And please remember the library is here to help you!   The library is open 101 per week. The reference desk of the Library is staffed with professional librarians who provide personalized service to assist with learning and research needs. You may get help and ask questions in person at the library, by phone at 254-968-9249, by email, or via the web at http://www.tarleton.edu/~library/askaref.html

    Tuesday, September 14, 2010

    Top 10 Tuesday: Tips for E-Research

    Research can be pretty daunting -- so many possible starting places, so little time. Online resources can help us locate useful, quality information, as well as meet deadlines if used systematically. The following list presents one possible strategy: begin with general resources and progress to more specialized resources.

    10. Start with Wikipedia for topic overviews.
    While not considered appropriate for most academic papers, encyclopedias like Wikipedia are good starting spots because they can help us understand a topic well enough to begin researching it.

    9. Read the
    library's e-books (and print books, too).
    Books offer in-depth discussions, have indexes for locating specific information, provide recommended reading lists, and can help you obtain a lot of information in a short time.

    8.
    Use Google Scholar to begin locating materials.
    Use this tool to locate article citations and, perhaps, links to articles in Tarleton Libraries' databases via SFX. It's a handy way to get a sampling of the research materials available on your topic.

    7. Advance to the Tarleton Libraries' web site.

    When you're ready to locate scholarly sources (i.e. when your instructor says "use peer-reviewed resources" or "locate some credible books on this subject"), go to your library -- either online or in person. Check out the resources, tips, and services available to you as part of the Tarleton community. You may be surprised at the resources that await you.


    6. Check out the library's
    subject research guides.
    These guides offer "starter" lists of databases and selected Internet sites, which are organized by subject to help "jumpstart" your research.

    5. Search the
    library databases.
    Using the library's databases gives you access to 1000s of electronic journals, trade magazines, and newspaper, as well as article citations, research reports, and online reference works.

    4. Use
    interlibrary loan to get more materials.
    If what you want/need isn't available via your Tarleton library (either electronically or in print), ask us to get it for you via your ILLiad account.

    3.
    Evaluate, evaluate, evaluate.
    Use evaluation criteria like authority, currency, reliability, etc. to help you choose resources worthy of being in your papers/projects.

    2. Use the University Writing Center's
    citation resources.
    The Writing Center staff can help you organize, develop, and document all types of research papers -- in person and online.

    1. Confused? Ask for assistance.
    Use Dick Smith Library's Ask a Librarian email reference, call the library's Information Desk (254-968-9249), or stop by during library hours. We can help you locate resources, give you tips for searching the library's database/catalog, and assist you in figuring out how to cite sources.

    Tuesday, July 27, 2010

    Top 10 recent changes happening at the library

    1. New Databases - Contemporary World Music, 19th Century British Pamphlets, and PsycARTICLES
    2. Free Downloadable Digital Music - Access and download music to your MP3 via the new Contemporary World Music database.
    3. New Laptops - We replaced our old set of laptops for 25 new ones!!
    4. Skins - Check out the laptop skins with our logo.
    5. New Computers - 30 on the main level and 8 added to the upper level of the library.
    6. Upgraded Wireless - We've moved to N Class wireless access for improved connectabililty.
    7. Convenient Outlets - No more tripping over laptop cords on the upper level; we installed outlets down the middle aisle.
    8. New Staff - You might recognize our new Reference Assistant, Thomas Schilb, our former circulation student worker -- Yeah Thomas!!
    9. Reader's Choice Books - Check out the new book display and help spotlight your favorite book for others to enjoy.
    10. New Headsets - Just in this week, new brand of headsets available for purchase.

    Monday, July 5, 2010

    Library Usage

    Wow! The library has over 170 databases that are available for our students 24/7 from anyway in the world. Last year over 2 million searches were done on these databases and over 920,000 full text articles were downloaded! Over 681 pieces of digital music were listened to, and 4,735 maps were viewed.

    The library has a lot of online resources. Do you know how to access them? (Find out here.) What is your favorite? Post a comment and let us know!