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Whether you’re majoring or minoring in Anthropology or just taking a single class, Koerner Library is where you’ll find many of the Anthropology books and print journals, not to mention people who can help you with your research questions.

For an overview of Koerner, check out the Guide to Koerner Library to get you started. Don’t hesitate to contact me if you need help. I welcome questions and feedback from you via telephone, email or MSN.

photo credit: UBC Library Graphics

Welcome, everyone, to 2008 and the start of a new term. If you’re wanting to get a head-start on course readings, here’s a quick tip – did you know you can search for a list of course texts that your prof has put on reserve at the library? Here’s how:

1) Go to the library catalogue (http://webcat.library.ubc.ca/, or from the library home page at www.library.ubc.ca)

2) Click on the course reserve tab – it looks like this:

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3) Search for your course by course name or instructor using the pull down menus, like this:

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And that’s it!

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Both Koerner and Woodward libraries will be open extended hours during the exam period from December 4-18.

Koerner’s extended hours:
Monday – Friday: 8am – 1am
Saturday, Sunday: 10am -1am

Woodward’s extended hours:
Monday – Thursday: 8am – 12midnight
Friday: 8am – 6pm
Saturday: 10am – 6pm
Sunday: 12noon – 12midnight

(Photo : Library graphics)

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You’ve likely heard about RefWorks, the online citation management tool that allows you to save references for your research paper from online databases such as AnthropologyPlus and Google Scholar, and then formats your paper in the citation style of your choice. Perhaps you’ve had a chance to get started with RefWorks, but need some help in using its many features.

This Wednesday is your chance to find out more! Come to Koerner Library for a RefWorks session from 1:30-3:30pm.

Register for the session here.

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You’ve likely heard about RefWorks, the online citation management tool that allows you to save references for your research paper from online databases such as AnthropologyPlus and Google Scholar, and then formats your paper in the citation style of your choice. Perhaps you’ve had a chance to get started with RefWorks, but need some help in using its many features.

Tuesday is your chance to find out more! Come to Koerner Library for a RefWorks session from 1:30-3:30pm.

In this hands-on workshop you will create your own personal database in RefWorks, learn how to add references, and use these references when writing a paper, automatically formatting your footnotes and bibliography in the citation style of your choice.

Register for the session here.

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This Thursday, I’ll be teaching a session on tools that you can use to stay up-to-date with research in your field. We’ll look at how you can get the latest Table of Contents for your favourite journals emailed to you, how to get updates on new publications in your area of research, and how to use RSS feeds:

Current Awareness Tools
in the Arts

Thursday, Oct 18, 2:00 – 3:30 pm
Koerner Library : Room 217

Keeping up-to-date in your field of research can be a challenging task. Learn how to set up email alerts or RSS feeds for your favourite databases, journals, or web sites, so that the information comes to you!

Register here:
http://toby.library.ubc.ca/booking/description.cfm?sessionid=4539

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(Photo by Sean Durham)

The semester is well under way, and research paper deadlines are quickly approaching. Are you looking for a time-saving tool that can help you track research, save your citations, and even format your bibliography in American Anthropological Association style?

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RefWorks, an online citation management tool, can do all those things and more. If you’d like to see how RefWorks can help you with your research process, come to a library workshop on RefWorks this Thursday:

In this hands-on workshop you will create your own personal database in RefWorks, learn how to add references, and use these references when writing a paper, automatically formatting your footnotes and bibliography in the citation style of your choice. The focus is on indexes, databases, and citation styles used by scholars in the Arts.

WHERE and WHEN?
Thursday, September 27
12:00-2:00 pm
Koerner Library : Room 217 (show me a map)
Sign up here.

RefWorks is sponsored by the UBC Library, and available free-of-charge to current UBC faculty, staff, and students.

UBC Library subscribes to hundreds of online resources to support research across the disciplines at UBC. There are several databases that Anthropologists and Archaeologists might choose, depending on the area of focus. The main database for the discipline is Anthropology Plus. Web Of Science’s Social Science Citation Index is strong in archaeology. Graduate students love the fulltext of dissertations available through Proquest Theses and Dissertations.

Until now, there was no way to search all three of these at once. Now you can! Introducing MetaLib, a new search tool that enables you to search multiple databases simultaneously.

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If you’re interested in exploring this tool, come to a library session Introducing MetaLib this Wednesday, September 26 from 1-2pm in Koerner 217. In this session, we’ll give you an overview of MetaLib and show you how you can use it to search across a set of pre-defined databases in a broad area like Newspapers, select databases from a specific specific subject area such as Anthropology and Archaeology, or create your own set of databases to search.

Register for the session here, and try out MetaLib beforehand here.

Change is afoot at the Library! We’ve recently unveiled a new library home page.
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The library website as a whole remains much the same, but the front door has undergone some changes in order to:

  • improve general site navigation by decreasing the number of clicks to popular services such as Subject Guides and MyAccount
  • offer a single search box called “OneSearch” to provide links to search results for books, articles, journals, library webpages, and library digital collections
  • provide access to MetaLib, a new tool which enables you to search across multiple databases simultaneously
  • highlight our growing digital collections such as the Japanese Canadian Photograph Collection
  • accommodate the common-look-and-feel UBC navigation bar

For more details, see the announcement, and don’t forget to provide feedback!

refworks.gif

Are you looking for an online tool that can help you track research, save your citations, and then format your bibliography?

RefWorks, an online citation management tool, can do all those things and more.

If you’d like to see how RefWorks can help you with your research process, come to the library workshop on RefWorks this Wednesday.

In this hands-on workshop you will create your own personal database in RefWorks, learn how to add references, and use these references when writing a paper, automatically formatting your footnotes and bibliography in the citation style of your choice. The focus is on indexes, databases, and citation styles used by scholars in the Arts.

WHERE and WHEN?
Wednesday, July 18 from 1:00 – 3:00 PM
Koerner Library : Room 217 (show me a map)
Sign up here.

If you can’t make this session, check the UBC Library instruction calendar for more.

RefWorks is sponsored by the UBC Library, and available free-of-charge to current UBC faculty, staff, and students.

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