May 03, 2012

Springer E-Books - Computers, Math, and Science

We are pleased to announce the addition of 24,000 e-books from Springer-Verlag, one of the world’s leading publishers in computer science, mathematics, the natural sciences, and other fields. 

The new e-book collections include all English-language books published by Springer from 2005 to 2012.

Springer e-books are provided as chapter-level PDF files with no Digital Rights Management (DRM), so each chapter is easy to download or print, and there are no restrictions on the number of users.

For those who prefer to own a personal print copy, all Springer e-books can be purchased by individuals in print at the discounted price of $24.95 (more than $100 below normal prices).

Springer e-books can be found online via LibSearch or the Library Catalog, or they can be searched directly via the SpringerLink database available at Databases A to Z.

Click one of the links below to browse Springer e-books by subject:

April 24, 2012

Writing and Citing Time - Know the best way to finish off that paper.

I'm sure many students are busy writing papers this time of the term.  With paper writing comes the citation and works cited pages at the end of those papers.  The library has tools and resources to help you with those citations on the Citing Sources page. 

A-Paper
Paper-writing involves much more than doing citations, so, although that popular section is worth a visit the citing & writing section also includes Research and Writing Tips.  Librarians try to link UHD students to valuable, high-quality web resources on these topics.

The library also has several research guides on citing and writing topics such as plagiarism, legal citations, grammar and more.  We also have guides on two of the more common used citations styles.  APA and MLA.  The guides have citation examples by material type, sample References/Works Cited pages, and other helpful information. Need more citation help? Ask a librarian! We'll point you in the right direction.

April 16, 2012

Peer-Reviewed or Scholarly Journals, what is that anyway?

Your professor wants you to write a paper using sources from scholarly journals. What does that mean? Why does it matter? And how do you find such things?

PeerReviewedScholarly journals are specialized publications that feature original research or analysis written by experts. Most scholarly journals are peer-reviewed or refereed -- that means every article is reviewed by a panel of experts before it is accepted for publication. Your professor wants you to use scholarly journals because they are considered the most accurate and reliable sources for university-level work.  

How do you find scholarly journals?  Start with the Databases & Articles section of the library website. When choosing a database, read the description to find out if the database covers journals. Once you choose a database, look for a "scholarly journals" option on the search page. Most databases have this option. Choose the "scholarly journals" option to limit your search

To find out more about scholarly or peer reviewed journals and how they differ from popular magazines or trade journals, check out the Peer-Review or Scholarly Journals page

April 09, 2012

Plagiarism - Avoid it.

When writing a research paper, you will need to incorporate other people’s statements and ideas into your writing, in order to provide expert support for your ideas.  When you do this, you will need to make it clear to a reader where you found these statements and ideas, whether in a book, an article, on the internet, in a film, by talking to someone personally, or through any other means.  This shows a reader that you did your research, and also allows her to find that same information if it interests her. Plagiarism

Plagiarism is when you use the work or ideas of someone else in your own work without giving credit to the original source. Sometimes people intentionally cheat by trying to pass a paper as their own work, but, very often, plagiarism happens by accident.

Regardless of the intention, plagiarism can have serious consequences. The UHD Student Handbook includes an Academic Honesty Policy (PS 03.A.19) with a definition of plagiarism and procedures for faculty to follow when they suspect a student may have plagiarized or cheated on a paper. Penalties for plagiarism can include a failing grade (F) for a course.

The UHD library has a research guide all about plagiarism, understanding it and avoiding it.  Take a look at it for more information or help.  You can also take a look at the Academic Honesty web page

 

February 27, 2012

Library Publishes Research Guide on Journal Quality Evaluation

Faculty and students frequently ask librarians "How can I tell if this is a high-quality journal?" The tools to help you answer that question are now listed in the new Journal Quality Evaluation research guide.

This guide provides tips and resources for evaluating journal quality for research and publication purposes. It includes coverage of open access journals.

A particular publishing peril in recent years is the advent of many "open access" journals with publishing fees that purport to have genuine peer review, yet their contents seem to belie that. Besides examining the articles in fields with which one is familiar, how can quality be determined? There are no "hard and fast" rules that allow one to determine whether a journal is of low quality. The Journal Quality Evaluation guide lists factors to help you examine this question.

So, whether you're assessing a journal as a research source or are interested in publishing in it, take a look at this guide. Feedback about it is appreciated -- see the Provide Feedback box on the guide.

December 08, 2011

Chronicle of Higher Education Now Available Online to UHD

The UHD Library is very pleased to announce that the Chronicle of Higher Education is now available online in full to all current students, faculty, and staff. The Library has subscribed to this premier higher education news source on a university-wide basis so that all UHD community members can access the full content without having to have individual or departmental subscriptions.

The "C" title list of the Library's A to Z database list provides access to the Library's subscription. If you are located at UHD's One Main downtown campus while accessing the Chronicle through this link, you should be able to see all content, including premium items.

If you use the link while anywhere other than the One Main campus, and you are a currently-affliliated UHD user, you will be redirected to log in to student e-services.

To make comments on the site and request emailed newsletters, you will still create an individual free account with the Chronicle through its site. This is something you can do without a subscription.

Authorized users who encounter problems with accessing the full content of the Chronicle via a UHD Library Web site link should contact the Library through Ask-a-Librarian.

December 02, 2011

AccessScience

A top encyclopedia of science and technology with biographies, news, and images. 

AccessScience

November 03, 2011

Free access to the Scientific American 1845-1909 digital archive

"Nature Publishing Group announced the complete digitization of Scientific American, the longest continually published magazine in the U.S. The archive, extending from Vol. 1, Issue 1, is available at www.nature.com/scientificamerican/archive. The last segment of the digitized archive encompassed the inaugural issue in August 1845 through December 1909. To celebrate the completion of the archive, the 1845-1909 archive collection will be free to all to access from Nov. 1-30, 2011." 

Source: http://newsbreaks.infotoday.com/Digest/emScientific-Americanem-Archive-Digitized-From--78698.asp

October 21, 2011

New Amazon eBook format aims to improve digital publications

From the article:

Kindle Format 8 (KF8) ... will replace Mobi 7. ... gone are the days of the black and white ebook. 

KF8, which will roll out to Amazon’s latest generation e-readers and reading apps in the next few months, provides publishers the ability to develop digital publications that require rich formatting and design functionality. The file format will be an ideal fit for children’s books, comics and graphic novels, cookbooks and even technical and engineering books. 

See the full article from website magazine.

September 14, 2011

High-Impact Education Practices: New Guide to Resources

Wordle: highimpact

UHD Library has just published a new library research guide on high-impact education practices. This guide spotlights UHD Library and other selected resources in high-impact educational practices, such as first-year seminars, learning communities, service learning, undergraduate research, and capstone experiences.

High-impact practices, which engage students in active learning experiences, are a topic of much interest in higher education. UHD's Provost, Dr. Brian Chapman, has recently created a High-Impact Practices Committee in order to facilitate broader use of these practices in UHD academic programs.

So, whether you're interested in getting background, implementing practices in your classroom, or doing a research paper, start with the Library's guide at http://library.uhd.edu/highimpact!