New Year’s Refurbishment – Library Levels 1 and 5

During the Christmas break we upgraded some of our most popular spaces! This brings more seats, power and a refreshed look and feel whilst harking back to our history.

Level 5

Level 5 East study area

The study area on the East side of the floor adjacent to the Postgraduate workroom has been repainted, refitted with new carpet, new tables with power sockets and extra seating capacity. There are now spaces for 14 more people, leaving room for just a little more growth before we reach our maximum capacity for the floor. Dictionary collections have also been relocated to create extra space to enable future space development.

Level 1

To complete the major refurbishment over Summer which created a new 115 seat study space, vinyl directional signage and wall art have now been added to the area. The art work complements the Terence Conran inspired paint scheme as it draws on the same curtain design. It also incorporates images from the University Archive provided by our Archivist Lizzie Richmond. These showcase some of the history of our building and the changes that have taken place. For example, the efforts of student volunteers to transfer 60,000 books and journals by hand to our new building when it first opened in February 1971.

Level 1 archive wall art

At the same time we have focused on bringing the rest of the floor up to spec. This includes the main corridor connecting the staircase, right through the horse-shoe shaped study area and the adjacent Level 1 Training Room.

Library 1967 Plan Level 1

Wall art: Library Plan Level 1, 1967

New lighting, carpeting and paint work have made a massive difference. It is now lighter, brighter and more welcoming environment for study.

New chairs have also been added to the Training Room. We only await installation of new projectors and microphones during Inter-Semester Break. This AV equipment improves on the previous kit and will enable our Library training sessions in this room to be recorded using Panopto lecture capture.

25% extra seats since 2014!

25% extra seats since 2014

These developments bring us to a grand total of 1,591 seats in the Library. This is an increase of 320 seats (25.2% extra) since 2014 (1,271 seats).

Alongside the various Learning Commons and Graduate Commons (on and off campus) which provide another 704 seats, there has been a significant boost in flexible study spaces in recent years. The total increase of 1,024 informal study spaces shows an 80.5% increase overall.

More power to you

Many of the desks in the Library have power sockets and we have been steadily adding these to those that do not. More than 250 desks have had power added to them in the last 2 years alone. You may also have noticed we have been adding sockets which include USB charging ports.

Finally, you may also have noticed we have re-carpeted the landing spaces on all levels in the North Staircase.

If you have any questions or comments, please contact library staff: library@bath.ac.uk

 

 

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Interoperability and Discoverability: An Overview of the Research Publication Systems we use at the University of Bath

A recurring theme across all of the work that takes place in Library Research Services is interoperability.

A key system we use across the team is Pure.  We work closely with colleagues in the University Research Office (RIS) to use this system and to support researchers, particularly with publications and data related issues.

capture2Both Pure and our Research Data Archive have relational functions for the exchange of information and for reporting and statistical purposes.  Other sites, such as ORCiD and EThOS harvest information from Pure, and services like IRUS-UK and ResearchFish help monitor and report on usage of records held in the system.

Discoverability is also a key theme.  Systems like Core, Google Data Search and the Library catalogue surface Pure data to users in their workflows.

New tools for interoperability and discoverability will develop over the next few years.  Part of the work we do in Library Research Services is to monitor and horizon scan for ways to maximise the visibility of the research produced at Bath.

If there are new systems that you believe are key to the dissemination or promotion of our outputs, please do get in touch.

Kara Jones, Head of Library Research Services

Posted in catalogue, databases, doctoral students, open access, postgraduates, publications, Pure, REF, research, Research Portal | Leave a comment

Consent and commercialisation: negotiating the open data agenda whilst protecting participants and intellectual property

An increasing number of funders and publishers are supporting the open data agenda by requiring researchers to openly share the data that underpin research publications. Yet, the culture of open data sharing and opinions about the benefits of data sharing vary widely between and within disciplines in higher education. There are numerous discipline-specific data repositories listed on re3data for the social sciences and life sciences, but relatively few for engineering.

research-data-blog

The Library Research Data Service runs courses on all aspects of data management and provides 1:1 advice to researchers. A common theme in questions raised by researchers is how to share data whilst protecting study participants or intellectual property. It is clear that, whilst the benefits of data sharing are understood, and generally accepted, there is some anxiety surrounding the ethics of data sharing, and concerns around the ability to maximise the academic and commercial value of the data by those who have created them.

There a number of actions that you can take throughout the data lifecycle to ensure that you are able to comply with funder and journal requirements whilst protecting your study participants and intellectual property. These are:

  • Ask your study participants for consent to preserve, share and re-use their anonymised data;
  • Negotiate the terms of data sharing with industrial and academic collaborators at the start of the study;
  • Anonymise data at the end of your study using the UK Data Service guidelines;
  • License your data at the time of deposit in a data archive or repository;
  • Deposit your data to a research data archive at time of publication but embargo access until you have registered patents, or otherwise protected intellectual property that can be commercialised;
  • Restrict access to sensitive data to bona fide researchers, and share data subject to data sharing agreements.

Funders and publishers will generally accept justifications for restricting data sharing for sensitive data, or delaying sharing for the protection of intellectual property. However, they will expect that these justifications will be provided within the data access / sharing / availability statements in papers.

If you would like more advice on data sharing you can contact the Library Research Data Service: research-data@bath.ac.uk

Alison Nightingale, Research Data Librarian

January 2019

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Library Research Services Week 2019

Following on from the success of our event last summer, the Library Research Services team would like to let you know that we are having another ‘Library Research Services week’ for 2019 and this will be held on 28th January – 1st February. The aim of this week is to raise the profile of Library Research Services to staff and students at the University.

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As well as a series of training and drop-in sessions (listed below), we will be setting up a stall at the bottom of the Claverton Dining Room stairs for the whole week. Guides to all our services will be available to pick up as you pass by.

Also look out for daily posts on the Library’s blog, as well as daily posts highlighting treasures from our Archives and Research Collections to the Library’s Instagram account. Other activities that are taking place during the week include:

Lunchtime training sessions

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Choosing a Data Archive: Creating Impact from Data Sharing, Monday 28th January, 12:15-13:05 (Students click here to register, Staff click here)

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A Quick Guide to Submitting your Thesis in Pure, Wednesday 30th January, 12:15-13:05

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Beyond Impact Factor: Choosing Where to Publish, Thursday 31st January, 12:15-13:05 (Students click here to register, Staff click here)

Open Access Drop-In, 1st February

 

LRSweekopenaccessFor anyone keen to check the open access status of their research outputs, then please come along to our drop-in session with the Open Access Team on Friday 1st February (10am-4pm, Library 4.12, no need to book, just turn up!).

We can take a closer look at your research outputs in Pure and make sure that any open access requirements are being met – something that might be useful as we approach our next REF Readiness Exercise.

If you have questions about paying for open access we can help with that too!


For any questions about the week please contact Hannah DeGroff, Scholarly Communications Librarian (ext. 5114, H.J.DeGroff@bath.ac.uk) or the Subject Librarian for your Department or School can point you in our direction.

Posted in archive & research collections, doctoral students, events, open access, postgraduates, publications, REF, research, Research Portal | Leave a comment

Silent & quiet study during revision and exams

quietPlease be considerate to your fellow students during the revision period by keeping noise to a minimum on the quiet floors (Levels 3 and 4) and maintaining silence on Level 5.

Quiet and silent study space is very popular at this time of year. As a result, students have requested that unattended personal items left in order to reserve Library desks are removed to allow others to use the space. Please be aware that Library staff may remove unattended personal items and take them to Security for safekeeping.

For more information on Library spaces, Learning Commons and other study venues around campus see: study areas and bookable workrooms. The University is again making additional spaces available to students for study. Dates and times of rooms available are listed by week (7-25 Jan).

Good luck with your exams!
The Library

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Quiet Study Rooms for assessment period now available.

To support student revision during the January assessment period, the University has timetabled a number of study rooms to be available at various times in the coming weeks.

You can find all the information about which rooms will be available and when you can use them from the Timetabling webpage

The Library will print out these times for each week for display in the Library foyer.

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Library refurbishment work during Christmas vacation

Level 1 unavailable, 13 Dec 2018 – 7 January 2019, during refurbishment

You may have noticed the lighting in the Level 1 training room has just been upgraded.  During the vacation, we’re going to be working to bring the technology and décor up to spec.

From 13th Dec to 7th January Level 1 will be inaccessible, while equipment is moved and the  training room, adjacent study space and main corridor to the floor are all fully refurbished. New carpets, AV equipment (projectors and microphones) signage and artwork will all be added.  While work is underway during this period, the public lift will not go down to Level 1.

Level 5 Postgraduate workroom temporarily unavailable 14 December – c.21 December 2018

The Level 5 Postgraduate workroom and desks between the workroom and staff lift will be temporarily unavailable while the study area  is recarpeted and refurbished.  New  desks and seating will be added to the East side of level 5 on Tuesday and Wednesday 8th – 9th January 2019, creating 14 additional study spaces with power sockets.

PCs Level 3 and Level 5

The PC areas at the front of both Level 3 and Level 5 will be unavailable on 17-18 December whilst Computing Services install new all-in-one stands.  The work will complete this year’s upgrade to the PCs, with modern, height-adjustable and compact stands fitted for all the new machines installed during the summer vacation.

We apologise for any disruption during these essential works over the Christmas period.  Study spaces, including PC and quiet areas, will remain available on floors 2 to 5 throughout this time.

If you have any questions, please contact library staff: library@bath.ac.uk

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Christmas Vacation Loans

In line with past years, the Library will attempt to automatically extend user loans on library stock from the subject floors so that books can be borrowed during the Christmas vacation period without being due for return between Saturday 8 December to Wednesday 9 January when many students will be away from campus.

For full details and advice the renewal of loans the Christmas vacation and when your books will be due for return or renewal please visit our Vacation Loans webpage.

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Explore our new 3D Library floorplans

We have just introduced interactive 3D floorplans of the Library. These replace the 2D plans you may be familiar with accessing via our Library catalogue records for print items.

These plans are principally to help users locate items from the catalogue, by highlighting the area of shelves in which the item should be located according to the level and class number. See this example for a book in the 370s on level 5.

There is also a searchable menu from which users can select other entities to locate too, for example:

  • Where to study e.g. individual, group, silent bookable/non-bookable and more
  • Where to get help e.g. service and info points
  • Find resources e.g. archives, language learning resources, short loan and more
  • Copy & Print e.g. location of everything from staplers to the change machine!
  • Toilets and amenities e.g. snack area, first aid, gender neutral toilets

You can tilt and rotate a plan using your mouse by holding down the left hand button, pan (move the plan around) by holding down the right hand button, and scroll in and out using the wheel. The plans work well on mobile phones and tablets too: use two fingers to tilt and rotate, pinch to zoom, and one finger to pan.

floorplan-L4

How were the plans made?

The software used to create the plans is provided by Wagner Wayfinder. It is used by a handful of other university libraries including Birmingham, Nottingham and Manchester. They produced the floorplans in Sketchup using Estates CAD drawings. We manage the menus and locations in our plans via an admin website. It uses WebGL to render the graphics in the web browser.

Your feedback

Let us know what you think by leaving a comment or contacting us at library@bath.ac.uk  Please be aware that whilst we are relocating books on Level 4, the exact floor plan locations for materials will be less precise.

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‘Times of Revolt, Revolting Times’ comes to the Library

The Library is hosting a small exhibition of posters and banners created by young people from Bath. You can see it on Level 2 of the Library from the 22nd to the 27th of November 2018. Members of the Department of Politics, Languages & International Studies (PoLIS) secured a small grant from the Being Human Festival to organise a public workshop focussed around the topics of women’s suffrage in the UK and May 68 in Paris.

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The participants of this workshop are all pupils, students, and young adults from the Twerton area of Bath. The exhibition consists of a selection of posters and banners created during the workshop. Dr Sandra Daroczi, Teaching Fellow in French Studies, organised the event, and the curated the exhibition. Project partners, Bath City Football Club, are hosting the workshop at their Twerton Park ground.

The Being Human Festival is an annual national festival of the humanities organised by the School of Advance Study London. You can learn more about the events happening across the country from the festival web pages (https://beinghumanfestival.org/).

To accompany the exhibition, the Library is presenting some of the banners via its Instagram account and displaying a selection of books and DVDs from its collection that are evocative of the issues and period represented by the Times Of Revolt, Revolting Times exhibition.

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Interested in the themes of this exhibition, then perhaps check out some the BFI website for some video on Women’s suffrage, perhaps take a video from our DVD collection (for example “Tout Va Bien” by Godard and Gorin, or Milou en Mai by Malle), or read some of the Library’s books related to this topic:

‘Paris May 1968’ Readings

Dreyfus-Armand, G., 2000. Les années ’68, le temps de la contestastion. Paris: Editions Complexe

Filoche, G., 1998. ’68-‘98 histoire sans fin. Paris: Flammarion

Grimaud, M., 1977. En mai, fais ce qu’il te plait. Paris: Editions Stock

Le Goff, J-P., 1998. Mai ’68, l’héritage impossible. Paris: Syros

Posner, C., 1970. Reflections on the revolution in France: 1968. London: Penguin

Ross, K., 2002. May ’68 and its afterlives. London: University of Chicago Press

Ross, K., 2005. Mai 68 et ses vies ultérieures. Chicago: University of Chicago Press

Salvaresi, E., 1988. Mai en héritage. Paris: Syros

Seidman, M., 2004. The imaginary revolution: Parisian students and workers in 1968. Oxford: Berghahn Books

Singer, D., 1970. Prelude to revolution – France in May 1968. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Southend Press .

Tartakowsky, D., 1997. Les manifestations de rue en France 1918-1968. Paris: Publications de la Sorbonne.

‘Women’s Suffrage in Britain’ Readings

Farris, S. R, 2017. In the name of women’s rights: the rise of feminonationalism. London: Duke Universtity Press

Fulford, R., 1957. Votes for women. London: Faber

Garner, L., 1984. Stepping stones to women’s liberty. London: Heinemann

Liddington, J. and Norris, J., 1978. One hand tied behind us: the rise of the women’s suffrage movement. London: Virago

Mackinnon, C., 2005. Women’s lives, men’s laws. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press

Pankhurst, E., 1971. My own story. New York: Kraus Reprint Co.

Pankhurst, R., 1979. Sylvia Pankhurst: artist and crusader. London: Virago

Pankhurst, Sylvia, 1977. The suffragette movement. London: Virago

Romero, P. W., 1987. E. Sylvia Pankhurst: portrait of a radical. New Haven: Yale University Press

Walby, Sylvia, 1999. New agendas for women. New York: St Martin’s Press

Wollstonecraft, M., 1792. A vindication of the rights of women. Available as an ebook via the library catalogue.

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