Library Updates & News

Showing 17 of 17 Results

09/10/2024
profile-icon Laura M. Ponikvar

Check out our updated Voting Information Guide!

The library has a tradition of participating in National Voter Registration Day activities, including registering students to vote. But did you know that in the November 2023 election, less than half of registered voters in Ohio actually voted? This year, we want to do more than just register voters. We want to help you make your voting plan! We have a printable worksheet to help make your voting plan and we will help you make your plan. 

 

 

Why should you vote?

Voting is crucial for artists, designers, and students as it ensures your voice is heard and helps to shape the future policies that directly impact your education, your career, your overall quality of life, as well as the lives of your family, friends, colleagues, and community. The Jessica R. Gund Memorial Library is committed to ensuring that everyone at CIA who is eligible to vote is not only registered to vote, but also makes voting a habit for life!

Come to the library before November 5, 2024 for assistance with registering to vote, checking voter registrations, requesting absentee ballots, answering questions about voting, envelopes and postage for election related mail addressed to students' boards of elections.

Our Voting Information Guide has been updated for the November General Election and has a ton of new information. Voting is easy, but if you haven't voted before, you may be nervous or unsure of how it works. The guide aims to answer as many questions as possible, while also linking you to all the information you need to be a voter this November. 

Please come by the library to register to vote, get help requesting absentee ballots, completing a voting plan that works for YOU and SO MUCH MORE. We have pre-printed absentee ballot applications, envelopes, stamps (for election related mail), and people who know how to answer your voting questions. 

This post has no comments.
03/19/2024
profile-icon Jackie Mayse

Student Success Librarian Jackie Mayse recently sat down with faculty member Beth Hoag to discuss her experiences transitioning to the use of Open Educational Resources (OERs) in her classes at CIA. Thank you, Beth for sharing your journey with OER-enabled pedagogy!

Can you introduce yourself? What is your role at CIA?

Sure. I'm Beth Hoag and as of this year I am a Senior Professor of Practice in the Liberal Arts Department. Prior to this year, I was a full-time lecturer for four years, and before that I was an adjunct. In total, I have been here for almost 10 years. 

Can you tell me about your journey in OER-enabled pedagogy in your classes?

As the only Anthropologist and faculty member teaching anthropology at CIA, I have always designed my own curriculum which gives me a wide latitude to pick books that I think are most appropriate for my courses. When I started ten years ago, I was using commercially available textbooks, but I quickly looked around to find the best textbook available that was reasonably priced or was easily accessible as a used book. The cost of textbooks has always bothered me, especially since my students are unlikely to use an Anthropology textbook again for another course. Later on, maybe the second or third year here, I worked with the publisher of two textbooks to offer an unbound copy through the bookstore. That saved students a bit of money and was the beginning of my thinking about how to make textbooks more affordable.

How long ago did you start adopting OERs in your classes?

The first time that I really thought about an open access book was when the American Anthropological Association, and the Society for Anthropology in Community Colleges, worked together to put out a first of its kind open access Cultural Anthropology textbook. An Open Invitation to Cultural Anthropology was first published in 2017 and is now in its second edition.

What motivated you to try this approach?

I decided to switch to open access textbooks in my classes when those two books became available. I have always been concerned with the cost burden of textbooks to students and an open access textbook solved that issue. Students can access them at no cost. I also like that Open Access textbooks are edited by many different people. So, although it's a single book, there's a wide variety of authors, points of view, and perspectives. Representation of diverse voices was important to me and motivated me to use open access books. 

How has the library played a role in you adopting OERs in your classes?

Through working with Laura, I realized that there were eBooks that could be accessed through the library that I could use in my classes. These weren't textbooks but books that the publisher provided access to through the library. So these weren't necessarily open access, but I started using them because they are available through the library at no additional cost to students. When I realized that these books could be accessed through the library, I began to think "How can I design an entire syllabus and reading selection for courses that don't rely on a textbook?". Currently, three of my courses are designed around resources that are solely accessed through the library. 

Also, the work of Jackie Lagunzad, who manages course reserves for faculty, has been phenomenal. In my Canvas course reserve, everything in my syllabus is listed in the order that we read it with the permalinks. Truly, the support I have received from the library is phenomenal. 

If you could give one piece of advice to other faculty members trying to implement OER materials in their classes, what would it be? 

I think an initial small step, and this is always going to be discipline specific, is to first of all see if your textbook can be replaced with something else. That's either an OER or pieced together. There are a lot of places that may not have an entire textbook, but might have resources that can be replaced. So I think, first and foremost is looking through your discipline to see who is out there doing that kind of work. I would also suggest that you talk to Laura and the Library staff to see what other resources are accessible to your students.

As we wrap up, is there anything else you'd like to share about OER textbooks?

I just think that people shouldn't be afraid of it. It's really amazing. Taking a little bit of time or to work with our librarians, to find out what resources are available. Because the benefits for ourselves and our students, I think far outweigh the time or any negative. I can't even think of a real negative. What would not be right with using free and openly accessible textbooks? It also democratizes education a little bit, it diversifies voices, it supports students by not charging them more money. There's really, I don't think, any single downside.

Notes: 

In our discussion Beth talks about the use of open access textbooks (OERs), as well as eBooks and articles accessed through the library. The materials accessed through the library are examples of affordable learning resources, and are not open educational resources (OERs).

The open-access textbooks Beth uses in her classes are:

  • Perspectives: An Open Invitation to Cultural Anthropology, first published in 2017, now in its second edition

  • Explorations: An Open Invitation to Biological Anthropology, first published in 2019, also in its second edition

  • Gendered Lives: Global Issues, for her gender class, published in 2022

This post has no comments.
03/18/2024
profile-icon Laura M. Ponikvar

Beginning today (March 18, 2024), the Jessica R. Gund Memorial Library will be handing out FREE solar eclipse glasses to CIA students and employees so you can safely experience the total solar eclipse on April 8, 2024! 

The library has a limited number of glasses, so we will be giving out one pair per CIA ID on a first come, first served basis. We want everyone at CIA to have the chance to get glasses if they need them. 

You must show your CIA ID to get a pair of glasses - no exceptions! 

 

solar eclipse glasses

This post has no comments.

This post has no comments.

There is a lot going on this week in the library! For more information, please visit the library's calendar at https://cia.libcal.com/calendar for more details, links, and registration details.

listing of events at the library Feb. 5-9, 2024

This post has no comments.
01/30/2024
profile-icon Laura M. Ponikvar

Help! I can't afford my books!

 

Help! I can't afford my books! infographicYou are NOT alone!

There are a lot of CIA students who cannot afford to purchase required or recommended reading materials for their classes. The library wants to help you find the materials you need to be successful in your classes at CIA.

 

Here are a few things you should definitely do:

1. Check the library

  • See if the library already has a copy of your textbook. The easiest way to see if we have a copy is to use Quick Search (aka EBSCO Discovery) to look for the book. 
  • It's possible that your faculty member put the book on course reserves in the library. That means we have a copy of the book in our library that you can use for three hours at a time in the library. If your textbook is not on course reserves, let us know! We will put it on reserve so that it's available for you and your classmates. Log on to Canvas and check the library's page in Canvas for links to our course reserves. Tip: if the page is blank, then you need to log into Canvas.
  • Need help? No problem. Stop by the library, start a chat, email us or call us on the phone. We want to help you find the materials you need. Contact us!

2. Ask your professor...

  • if an older, less expensive edition is similar enough for you to use.
  • to check with the CIA Library about putting a copy on course reserves OR to ask the library to purchase a copy for course reserves
  • to check with the library director about free and/or affordable course material alternatives

3. Get creative! 

  • Stop by the library, start a chat, email us or call us on the phone. We want to help you find the materials you need without spending a lot of money! Contact us!
  • Check Ohiolink to see if you can get a copy from another library. Remember to ask us for help if you don't know how to do this!
  • Look for used copies or rentals online.
  • Borrow or share with a friend.

4. Advocate for yourself and for other students!

Tell anyone and everyone about the issue. They need to know about the problem before they can help fix it. There are alternatives and we all need to work together to make learning materials more affordable!

 

 

Credit: This is a derivative of Help! I can't afford my books! (rb.gy/3imwp) by JMU Libraries, licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY). Thank you to Liz Thompson at JMU Libraries.

This post has no comments.

This post has no comments.
12/22/2023
profile-icon Jackie Mayse

We wish you a safe and restful winter break. See you in January!

 

This post has no comments.

This post has no comments.
11/22/2023
profile-icon Jackie Mayse

Gund Library will be closed Wednesday, November 22 - Sunday, November 26th for the Thanksgiving Holiday. We wish you a happy and safe holiday break.

Thanksgiving Break Hours Graphic

 

 

This post has no comments.

Faculty Workshop - Affordable Learning & OER at CIA (ONLINE)

Tuesday, October 10, 2023

11:00am - 11:45am

Affordable Learning Initiatives look to reduce costs for students by substituting low-cost or no-cost resources in place of high-price commercial textbooks. Examples include:

  • Using existing Open Educational Resources (OER) for course instruction and/or modifying/enhancing existing resources.
  • Creating OER that can be used by students you are teaching or by other instructors or scholars.
  • Using library-licensed materials, including books, eBooks, and electronic journal and magazine articles for course instruction, or making use of library physical and electronic reserves. These materials have already been purchased by libraries or institutions, but are no additional cost to students.

This CIA faculty only workshop will review the options for faculty and help find ebooks, streaming videos, articles, and OERs (including grant funding!) that you can use to help reduce the cost of learning for your students, while increasing success and equity. 

Register for the Zoom link.

This post has no comments.

This post has no comments.
07/19/2023
profile-icon Jackie Lagunzad

🕛 Library Hours Update: The library will be open 12-4pm today. We'll be opening late to facilitate an employee training session in the morning. This update applies for this date only.

This post has no comments.
07/03/2023
profile-icon Jackie Mayse

Happy Fourth of July! CIA Library will be closed Monday, July 3rd and Tuesday, July 4th for the holiday.

This post has no comments.
06/19/2023
profile-icon Jackie Mayse

Happy Juneteenth! CIA Library will be closed today, June 19, 2023 for the holiday.

This post has no comments.
05/17/2023
profile-icon Jackie Lagunzad

🕑 Library Hours Update : The library will be open 10am-2pm today. We'll be closing early for the All-Employee Meeting & Reception.

This post has no comments.
05/05/2023
profile-icon Jackie Lagunzad

CIA Library hours are Monday thru Thursday 10am to 4pm, Fridays 10am to 12pm, and closed Satudays/Sundays.

CIA Gund Library Summer Hours (starting Friday, May 26th):

  • Mondays-Thursdays: 10am-4pm
  • Fridays: 10am-12pm
  • Saturdays-Sundays: Closed

Please note that library hours are subject to change without notice. Subscribe to the library's blog to receive the latest library updates. Contact us for questions and more info!

This post has no comments.
Field is required.