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New Faculty Orientation 2025

Instructional Support Services

Instructional Support Services from the Library:

  • Course Reserve and Textbook Collections
  • Classroom (in person and virtual) sessions and demos
  • Recorded demos
  • Course and assignment specific guides and tutorials
  • Textbook & readings consultations

Course Reserves

Forms are available at Circulation Desk or at http://libguides.southernct.edu/reserves

Reserve Materials can circulate for 2 hours in-library use, or overnight. Indicate your preference on the form.

Most requests will be available the same day

If you have any questions, feel free to contact us at AccessServices@southernct.edu.

Library Instruction

Learning how to use the library effectively and efficiently is one of the most important things a student can do to ensure a successful college experience. Far too often, students believe Wikipedia and Google are all they need to write a research paper. As faculty know, Wikipedia and Google are useful tools, but they are unlikely to be sufficient for writing an academic research paper! The sooner students learn about what the library has to offer, the sooner they will be delivering research papers and other assignments that productively utilize Buley Library’s many excellent resources.

SKILLS AND OUTCOMES

Ideally, library research and information literacy skills should be integrated into the course, continually reinforced and built upon at the appropriate level for the student. It may help to think of your students as being somewhere on a continuum of learning that has identifiable outcomes at each level.

 

INQ 101 Students should learn:

• Where the library is

• The difference between the Research & Information Desk, the Check Out Desk, and the IT Help Desk

• How to log in for off-campus access/course reserves/requests

• The difference between the open internet and the library’s scholarly online article databases

• That there is a subject librarian for every major, and how to contact those librarians

• How to use SouthernSearch to find a variety of library resources and start to differentiate between them

• How to cite the resources they find

[All of this is covered in the INQ 101 FYRE Library Assignment and session.]

 

Higher Level Students should learn:

• How to create and use a search strategy, including keywords, synonyms, Boolean operators, and truncation symbols

• How to evaluate information sources

• How to locate an article if they already have the citation

• How to request a book from interlibrary loan

• What a literature review is and how to write one

• How to properly cite all materials

• Familiarity with the style guide for their major

• Familiarity with the databases for their major

• Familiarity with the information cycle, different kinds of publications, and how scholarly knowledge is created and shared

 

HOW THE LIBRARY CAN HELP YOU INTEGRATE LIBRARY SKILLS INTO YOUR COURSES

Tours and Demonstrations for Faculty

Librarians are available to provide tours of library resources to new faculty. We are also happy to meet with any faculty to discuss and demonstrate how the library works, new services, new databases, and changes to database design or function.

Creating Research Assignments

We can also assist at the stage when you are creating research assignments for your students. We occasionally see assignments at the Research & Information Desk that require students to use resources to which Buley Library does not have immediate access. If you are not certain that Buley’s resources are adequate for a particular assignment, check with a librarian. We can tell you whether the project is feasible at Buley, suggest ways to adjust the assignment so that it can be completed with our resources, or offer alternative resources for the assignment.

Tours for Students

Tours of the library building provide students with a sense of the library as a physical space. Students will learn where different library needs are met (Research & Information vs. Check Out Desk), where different resources are located (DVDs vs. reference books), which floors are the best for studying, and much more. We also have a Virtual Tour.

Course Specific Instruction

Whether in a library classroom, the usual course classroom, or online, students learn about how to narrow or broaden a research question, how to select the most useful database for a topic, the best search strategies, revising a search query, accessing full-text materials, and saving search results. Students can also try various searches on their own and have the opportunity to ask questions about their research topics while both the librarian and the instructor are in available.

Research & Information Desk Assistance

Librarians are almost always available at the Research & Information Desk and/or via Librarian Chat to help students learn to use SouthernSearch and library databases, starting with selecting a database and progressing to the best search strategies and how to evaluate the results.

Individualized Assistance

If you feel only a few of your students need library instruction, rather than the entire class, feel free to refer them directly to the subject librarian for assistance with a particular database or assignment.

 

SETTING UP AN INSTRUCTION SESSION

You may request an instruction session by going to http://libguides.southernct.edu/formclass or by contacting one of the subject librarians

Distance/Online Learning

Distance Library Services for Online Faculty                                   

 A Universe of Scholarship                   

Exploration of the scholarly universe is part of a university education. Online students can enjoy that same exploration thanks to the online resources in the modern academic library.                

  • Journal, magazine, and newspaper articles                        
  •  Digital dictionaries, encyclopedias, and monographs                        
  • Audio & Video
  • Statistics and data
    Library online resources can be used for course readings and even textbooks.
    If a particular resource is not available online, the Library’s Electronic Reserve system can provide access to articles, book chapters, faculty notes and exams.         

The Library Distance Learning Coordinator

Not only does the Library provide online materials, but also online expertise. Rebecca Hedreen is our Library Distance Learning Coordinator. She has a Master of Library and Information Services degree and a Master of Education degree with a specialization in Adult Education and Distance Learning.                   

Rebecca can provide hands on assistance at the Library, in your office, or over the Internet. You can even add her to your online courses, providing both you and your students with “in class” advice on library research and online education.

Rebecca Hedreen
Library Distance Learning Coordinator
http://libguides.southernct.edu/distance
(203) 392-5753
hedreenr1@southernct.edu

Special Collections Instructional Sessions and Support

Our specialty is creating opportunities for students to interact with primary resources and rare and unique examples of cultural production throughout history. We relish the chance to work with faculty across the disciplines to identify and present material to your students that will augment your pedagogy and provide memorable learning experiences for your students.

Instruction sessions can be focused introductions to primary sources in general or to specific genres of material. We also conduct workshops designed to engage students in hands-on creative experiences, as well as provide research introductions to materials that might form the basis for course-based, small analytical exercises or larger research projects.

To arrange a meeting to see materials, plan a class visit, or explore ways that our primary sources could be integrated into your curriculum, please contact the department at specialcollections@southernct.edu, or contact Tina Re, Special Collections and Artists’ Book Librarian, Art Liaison: ret1@southernct.edu

Data Instruction & Resources

Data, in this case, specifically refers to downloadable data sets which can be analyzed using statistical software or spreadsheets. There are many more sites for statistics, but those are usually not in formats directly suitable for reanalysis.

There are an increasing number of data portals and sites devoted to helping researchers find and use data. The School of Data has a module on Finding Data as part of their "Data Fundamentals" course.

Try our new data & statistics database, Statista!


Are you an educator looking to add data to your classroom? Want to integrate quantitative analysis into your teaching? Have a look at Teaching with Data, a project from the people at ICPSR, SSDAN, and NSF.


If you don't find what you need in these sources of datasets, you may need to look for statistics instead. Statistics are more likely to be held in reports and other non-manipulatable sources. However, you can try copying and pasting tables from PDFs and other documents into Excel, or try Tabula (at the bottom of the page) for PDFs.

Ask your Subject Librarian for help finding statistics and other sources specific to your topic. 


Additional subjects and resources may be found in the following e-book:


More data sources and info: