The Library recently finished a light and informative video aimed at first-year students. The purpose of the video is to introduce you to an academic library, to show you how using the library can positively influence your academic experience. We know that for many of you entering Hope College this fall, using a library is not part of your past experience. And in the age of Google, Yahoo, Del.icio.us, and facebook we have a pretty good idea why this is so. So what can we offer you when you ask "Why the Library?"
When you find yourself finally settled into some corner of a library, as you begin to engage with the ideas flowing from a book, a journal, or from your own pen, you will find that your mind clears. Surrounded by quiet, you find that the atmosphere in a library gives you permission to shut out worries and demands of your daily life, and that you can think. You find that you are able to concentrate in a way that you cannot in other places. You have permission to engage fully with the ideas in front of you and you find more clarity in your own thoughts.
When you walk between the book stacks in the library, you are walking among conversations handed down over centuries. Conversations of great men and women, and also those of misguided purpose, sit together on shelves in constant discussion. Conversations of those with whom you agree and those with whom you disagree await your examination. Sitting amongst this noisy conversation, you have the opportunity to discern your own truth, perhaps a truth that did not previously exist for you. Creative expression, that which makes us most human, is preserved among the shelves; literature, poetry, dance, visual arts and music are there to be experienced and explored. The greatest scientific discoveries, emerging from the sweat of years of research, building upon trial and error of those who have gone before them, live in the texts of scholarly journals.
We all recognize that libraries now exist in two realms, the physical and the virtual. The virtual library - electronic books, journals, reference sources, and databases of digital print, audio and image files - make library research efficient, convenient and, in some ways, easier than in the past. The materials found in virtual libraries, however, are just beginning to become visible through search engines like Google. Most virtual library material is concealed within library electronic collections. Research shows that young adults "do not find library-sponsored resources intuitive and therefore prefer to use Google and Yahoo instead: these offer a familiar, if simplistic solution, for their study needs." What the library can offer then, is a guiding hand through the maze. Research also shows that users of digital libraries spend more time "clicking around," figuring out how to navigate the site, and bouncing from one link to another as they "skim" for information. Librarians teach people which electronic resources will be best for a particular need, how to navigate the interface, how to think about search results, and how to get to the content.
Just as the technology of finding information has changed, so have the ways in which students learn. We now know that learning happens in community. In addition to reading, students spend much of their time creating, exploring, communicating and collaborating. Libraries are responding to these shifts by providing a supportive environment that nurtures these activities, integrating content with technology and services. Going beyond what is learned in a classroom by further exploring, internalizing and challenging, requires curiosity, a thirst to know more. The best library cannot instill that in our students alone. But we hope when that thirst appears, what we provide will satisfy.
Over time the ways in which scholarly information is communicated and how and where it is accessed will evolve. Libraries will adapt and provide new tools, methods and services for our users. Perhaps some day soon everything truly will be available on Google. Until that time however, we need to continue to explain to our students, "why the library."
-- Kelly Jacobsma
Director of Libraries
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Music in the Catalog
It's Sir George Grove's 188th birthday! This English music historian lends his name to one of the premier reference sources in music: The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Even better, we have online access to Grove Music Online, a compilation of several music dictionaries. Not only can you read about music from your college computer, or when logged into your library account, you can now listen to music directly from the catalog using one of our music databases. Next time you find a music title followed by the words "electronic resource" click through to the sample. Sir George would be thrilled, I'm sure.
Wednesday, August 6, 2008
The Olympics
For the next few days world attention will be turned to the business of the Olympic games. They are not only a series of sporting events, they are also political and historical in nature. To supplement your television viewing I recommend the following: Triumph: The Untold Story of Jesse Owens and Hitler's Olympics by Jeremy Schaap; Munich on dvd, and When the Girls Came Out to Play: The Birth of American Sportswear by Patricia Warner. When it comes to sports, we have something for everyone.
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