- Frequently
Asked Questions about the Library
-
- How often
do librarians or others return the books and magazines back to the shelves?
- SCCC student
assistants sort and return books, magazines, journals and newspapers once
daily. This usually takes place before 4 p.m. Student assistants are not available
for this task in the evening hours. (Hint: Can't find an item on the shelf?
For magazines, journals, newspapers, check the plastic bins near the entrance
to the ERA/ESL room; for books, check the carts near the copy machines. ASK
FOR HELP IF YOU STILL CANNOT FIND WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR)
- What kind
of students work here?
- SCCC students
help out at the Circulation Desk (checking out books, shelving materials);
UW Library School students assist at the Reference Desk (using periodical
databases, the Online Catalog, Internet resources, locating books in the stacks,
answering some reference questions).
- Who decides
what is included in the collection? How?
- Librarians working
with the Director of Information Resource Services. Decisions are made based
on students' needs in terms of subject and ease of access, as well as standards
of organization for an academic library.
- How does
the reserve system work (i.e. the place hold option)?
- This is commonly
known as Inter-Library Loan or ILL. The 3 campuses of the Seattle Community
College District share library resources; if an item shows available at another
campus in the Online Catalog, a student can request an inter-library loan
by plac ing a hold on the title. Simply enter your student number and a message
will be sent to the other campus library requesting that the item be delivered
to Central campus (this usually takes a day or two and the student pays no
delivery fee).
- How do I
use Audio Visual equipment?
- When checking
out audio visual materials, ask the staff person at Media Services to give
you a "quickie" instruction session.
- Conference
Rooms? Quiet Study Rooms?
- Conference Rooms
are available for group study, meetings, filming or video -viewing. Play it
safe and make reservations at Media Services to prevent being "kicked
out" by a group who did.
- Are the computers
in the classrooms available for anyone to use without making a reservation?
- There is one
computer in Classroom A which is an instructional workstation (librarians
only). The computers in the Library Instruction Lab are reserved for hands-on
instruction.
- Are there
limits on who can use the computers?
- Students doing
research related to school projects and homework have first priority on the
library's computers. Email is restricted to the four stations inside Room
C.
- Can I type
a paper in the library?
- Students who
have paid the Universal Technology Fee are eligible to use the computer lab
in the library (near the copy machines) and in the main lab, Room 3148. Lab
assistants are available to help you log on and use the software.
What time
does the library close?
- Hours are: Mon-Thu
7:45am - 9pm Fri 7:45am - 4:30pm Sat 10:30am - 3:30pm
- How long
can you check books out for and how many at a time?
- Check out books
for 2 weeks, magazines and journals for 1 week. As many as you can carry :)
at one time.
LIBRARY RESOURCES
-
- What is the
section on vertical files for? What's a pamphlet for? What do you find in
it?
- Vertical files
contain newspaper clippings dealing with important local issues; pamphlets
(short informational mini-books) issued by non-profit organizations; company
annual reports. Information resources that are valuable but would not last
very long if stored with regular sized books or magazines.
- How many
kinds of magazines are here?
- There are about
500 periodical titles (magazines, journals, newspapers) in our collection
(past and current). Check the Periodical Holdings List to get an idea of the
range of subjects covered.
- Can I watch
videos of "Video Courses"?
- Yes. Check the
list at Media Services.
- How can I
use microfilms? Do I need permission for it?
- No permission
is needed, but you can ask a librarian or reference assistant to help you
find the right issues and use the machines. When you feel comfortable working
on your own, go ahead and select the film or fiche you need and view your
document on the readers in the southeast corner of the library.
- What are
periodicals / indexes?
- Periodicals
are regularly issued magazines, journals, newspapers. Indexes list the articles
found in periodicals according to topic, providing complete bibliographic
information.
- How do you
use periodicals / indexes? Is there any easy way to find a newspaper article
on the shelf? Why would I use an index?
- Use periodicals
for current information on a topic. An index will help you identify which
periodical issues have articles on a given topic.
- What's the
difference between periodicals and newspapers?
- NEWSPAPER is
a kind of PERIODICAL. Shelved separately for format reasons (newspaper larger,
usually issued daily - takes up more space).
- Do we have
children's books? Oversized photography books? CD's that we can check out?
- A selection
of notable (award winning) children's books is available in the main collection.
Browse the PZ classification area or use the online catalog to search for
a specific author or title. Oversized art books are shelved in the N classification
area with the other art books; photography in the TR classification. Oversized
books tend to be placed sideways on the shelves; otherwise check on the bottom
shelf where they lie flat.
- Does the
library carry the same books found in the student book store?
- No, due to budget
restrictions. You may sometimes find an older edition of a textbook in the
main collection; check the Online Catalog. Some instructors (e.g. Spence,
LIB101) place a copy of their class text and/or photocopies of required or
recommended readings on RESERVE. Stop by the Reserve Desk and ask the staff
person for your instructor's last name and the course number.
- Library of
Congress classification system lists magazines in "A" but at SCCC
they're alphabetized?
- Faster processing.
Easier access.
- Can the encyclopedias
without an R call number be checked out?
- Yes. Older editions
of general encyclopedias are removed from the Reference collection (R or REF
designation before the call number), and placed in the Main Book collection
for check out.
- What exactly
does the Media Services office have to offer?
- Language tape
duplication, CD check-out, video and DVD check-out (library use only), film
strips, slides, video equipment check-out, and audio cassette check-out.
- Where's all
the fiction? Is it just the shelves of paperbacks at the beginning of the
collection?
- Fiction is shelved
within the main collection in the P classification area (Literature) according
to geographical region. SCCC Library does not purchase popular fiction titles;
the fiction collection is limited to works of award-winning authors.
- How do you
use an atlas or how do you look at one?
- Use the index
to identify the place name you want to examine for location, distance between
two points, etc. An atlas can also answer questions concerning climate, environment,
commodities, political boundaries... Graphic representations (illustrations,
charts, something other than letters and numbers) make the information more
interesting and help the user to better understand the material.
- Dictionary
on south wall of library (72 volumes)?
- Webster's English
Dictionary in BRAILLE, remains of a small Braille collection.
-
This page is maintained by
Lynn
Kanne