5 New Things at the Library

Welcome back from spring break! As you settle back into the routine of classes, campus activities and studying, we would like to draw your attention to five new technology, equipment and website additions at the library. We want to make your library experiences – from charging your smartphone to identifying the location of a book in the stacks – a little bit easier.

Many of these items were implemented in response to feedback received during 14 Days to Have Your Say!, but we welcome suggestions at any time. Email library@bentley.edu or use the Contact Us form to tell us how we can improve the library.

1. USB charging outlets have been installed in the atrium outside the art gallery.

usb

2. StackMap has been integrated with Encore (classic catalog integration is coming soon). Click the “Map It!” button to pinpoint the exact physical location of books, DVDs, audiobooks and periodicals in the library.

stack-map-screenshot

3. A second Bookeye book scanner has been installed in the upper level print room.

2nd-floor-BookEye-scanner

4. Blu-ray DVDs are being purchased for the popular DVD collection and two Blu-ray players have been installed in the Video Preview room.

Blu-ray-DVDs-and-players

5. A third water bottle filling station has been installed on the lower level.

H2O-filling-station

We hope you enjoy the new additions. Don’t hesitate to contact us if you need help or have any questions.

Library Printing Update

The most frequently asked questions at the library this week have been “how do I print?” (from new students) and “are these printers working?” (from returning students). Just before fall classes started, Bentley’s IT Client Services made an important change to the campus printing network, affecting library computer use and printing. Users who wish to print from a library computer are now required to login to the computer using their full Bentley email address and network password. To release a print job, users must swipe their Bentley ID at the printer.

Details about the network printing changes were provided in an email sent by the Help Desk to all students on Tuesday, September 2nd (copied below):

Dear Students,

Welcome back to Bentley.

Over the summer there has been a change to the network printing stations located in the Library and the Student Center. The keyboards have been removed and you will now swipe your ID only to view and print your jobs.

The network printing queues are named “Falcon” (black and white) and “Falcon Color”. As a reminder, print jobs remain in the queue for 48 hours only. After that time, they are deleted.

If you plan to print from the Library computers, you will need to login to the Library computer using your full Bentley email address and your network password. The username, “.\classuser”, is no longer a valid login to the Library computers.

As a recap, printing from the network printers in the Library and the Student Center will now be done by swiping your ID card.

When using a Library computer, you will need to use your network credentials (Bentley e-mail and password) to login and use the computers. The username “.\classuser” is no longer available.

Please contact the HelpDesk at the contact information below if you have any questions.

Best wishes for a successful semester.

IT Client Services Help Desk

Library Lower Level
Faculty Staff Help Desk – 781-891-2854
Student Help Desk – 781-891-3122
Email: helpdesk@bentley.edu

If you need help using the library computers or printers, please visit either the Library Services Desk or the Reference Desk.

We’re Making it Faster & Easier to Print!

Welcome back to campus! If you’ve been to the library this week you may have noticed that over winter break we installed additional printers on the main and upper levels of the building. The total printer count now stands at 9, including 7 B&W printers (6 on the main level, 1 on the upper level) and 2 color printers (both located on the upper level).

And there’s more good news… To increase the speed and ease of printing from within the library, we have installed 2 Quick Print stations. Forget the frustration of hunting for a computer to sit at just to send a print job – you’ll find a Quick Print terminal mounted on the wall outside each of the printer rooms on the main level. Simply walk up to the Quick Print terminal, send your print job, and go.

Finally, in the very near future, a printer will be connected to the scanner on the lower level, allowing users to scan and print.

Please let us know if you have any questions about our printing enhancements. Have a great semester, everyone!

78 (and counting!) Things You Didn’t Know About the Bentley Library

Whether you’re a heavy user of the library or only have a vague idea of our existence, there’s probably a lot you didn’t know about the way this place works. We polled the staff and came up with 78 things you might not know about the library. Can you think of any others? Something you were surprised to learn that you suspect your fellow Falcons don’t know about? Tell us in the comments, and we’ll add it to the list.

78 Things You Didn’t Know About the Bentley Library

 

  1. The library has more than 6,000 DVDs—from The Sopranos to Inside Job to Casablanca—and you can borrow them for free.
  2. Everyone at Bentley has an online library account. You can log in through the library’s catalog to place holds and renew items.
  3. Each academic year, around 260 classes come to the library’s Research Instruction Center for personalized instruction sessions with our reference librarians.
  4. During the academic year, the library is open 110.5 hours per week.
  5. Through the library, Bentley affiliates have access to the full text of more than 35,000 magazines, journals, and newspapers.
  6. The Bentley School of Accounting and Finance was established in 1917, but the first Bentley library was not founded until 1958. Professor James Boudreau was the first director.
  7. The Baker Library Collection is named after Solomon R. Baker ’24, who donated $250,000 to Bentley when it broke ground in Waltham.
  8. The library’s clock tower was built in 1973, five years after the rest of the building was completed.
  9. The library has lockers downstairs where you can stash your stuff for the day. Check out a key at the Library Services Desk!
  10. Never attended an opening reception at the art gallery in the library? You’re missing out on free food and a chance to talk to the artist.
  11. The library has a collection of online research guides assembling the best resources for different subject areas and courses. Our most popular subject guide is Accountancy, and the most popular class guides are for GB301.
  12. The library’s Bowles Room is named for Edward L. Bowles, former Trustee Emeritus and world-renowned scientist who donated his personal library to Bentley College in the early 1980s.
  13. The library’s Bowles Room has six DVD players so you can watch movies that have been placed on reserve.
  14. There are two public scanners in Computing Services on the lower level of the library building.
  15. There is a fax machine on the lower level of the library where you can send documents anywhere in the world free of charge.
  16. The library has eight regular printers and one color printer. You can print to them from any campus computer.
  17. Cell phone dead? Use one of the library’s old-school pay phones, located at the bottom of the front staircase. On-campus calls are free.
  18. The Careers Collection on the second floor of the library contains hundreds of career guides and job search skills books.
  19. Time to kill between classes? Sit and enjoy a magazine in the Current Periodicals section on the main floor of the library. Yes, you could read them online, but isn’t it more relaxing to flip through the glossy pages of People or Rolling Stone while you enjoy your latte?
  20. The library’s vending machines not only dispense Pepsi, Cheetos, and M&Ms, but also index cards, highlighters, and Tylenol.
  21. Reference librarians love nothing more than to help you with your research. They’ll answer your questions in person at the Reference Desk or via email, IM, and phone.
  22. Large, colorful building directories on the wall near all the library staircases can help you locate your study room, that certain section of the stacks, or the nearest restroom.
  23. To ensure that we always have the most popular bestsellers on the shelf, the library leases—not buys—all of our popular reading books. Books that aren’t as popular anymore are returned to make room for new items.
  24. The library has more than 600 audiobooks. They come in two formats—CD and Playaways, pre-loaded MP3 players.
  25. Laptop being fixed? There are 120 public computers in the library.
  26. Beware—laptop batteries get very hot! Protect yourself by using a lap desk. The library has them on hand in the main floor reading room.
  27. Looking for a super-quiet place to study? Try a study carrel on the top floor of the library.
  28. The library subscribes to more than 80 research databases that give you access to hundreds of thousands of articles and reports.
  29. The library has passes for free or reduced admission at area museums, including the Museum of Fine Arts, the Museum of Science, the New England Aquarium, and the Franklin Park and Stone Zoos.
  30. Members of the Bentley community are welcome to borrow books from the Brandeis library. Cards are available at the Library Services Desk.
  31. The library offers workshops on conducting research and citing sources throughout the school year. We advertise them in our monthly email newsletter, on Facebook and Twitter, and in the library’s In the Know blog.
  32. Each library group study room has its own thermostat. You can control the temperature within the range of 68 to 72 degrees.
  33. If you access Google Scholar through the library’s databases page, it will recognize you as a Bentley user and link you to articles in many of our databases.
  34. The full text of the Wall Street Journal going back to 1889 is available through ProQuest. Factiva has it too, from 1979 to the present.
  35. Looking for the full text of the New York Times? You can find it in ProQuest going back to 1857.
  36. The library has an archive of school newspapers going back to 1959.
  37. The library’s reference collection is a trove of information you won’t find anywhere else—including statistics, historical information, and well-researched overviews of topics. Our expert reference librarians can help you find anything you’re looking for, too.
  38. Save time formatting your Google Scholar citations! You can export them to your RefWorks account to cite later.
  39. Faculty videos can be checked out by any Bentley community member for three days (unless, of course, a video is on reserve for a class).
  40. ProQuest is the library’s most-searched database, averaging 25,000 searches per month.
  41. Bentley has won several awards in the Business School Beanpot Case Analysis competition. The library houses the plaques—you can find them near the Current Periodicals section.
  42. The library has more than 7,000 autobiographies and biographies on people ranging from Jackie Robinson to Sarah Palin.
  43. The chimes you hear coming from the clock tower are not actually bells. It’s a recording!
  44. The library’s self-checkout station is a quick and easy way to check out your books and DVDs.
  45. On average, the library adds 1,000 new e-books per month to the collection.
  46. The library employs more than 30 students who perform work vital to our operation, from processing new books to checking out DVDs and delivering the mail.
  47. The Opposing Viewpoints book series can help you prepare for a paper, presentation, or speech. The library has 237 of these titles on topics from cyber crime to illegal immigration to teen drug abuse.
  48. The library receives nearly 10,000 new physical books per year..
  49. Reference librarians with specialized knowledge of particular subject areas read hundreds of reviews and scour catalogs to select books for the library’s collection.
  50. Each year, all 10,000 new books are ordered by just two people from the library’s technical services staff.
  51. The library has digital voice recorders that you can check out to record interviews or lectures.
  52. Anyone can submit a review to the library’s book review blog, Book Buzz.
  53. The library is open 24 hours during finals.
  54. The library was entirely renovated in 2006 for $17 million. During the renovation our collection of 200,000+ books and DVDs was packed up and sent to a storage unit.
  55. The library has a small but growing collection of graphic novels, including classics like Watchmen and Ghost World.
  56. You can suggest books and DVDs for us to add to the library’s collection. If we purchase the item, we’ll let you know. Submit your requests via the Suggest a Purchase form on our web page.
  57. You can follow us on Twitter, like us on Facebook, and check in at the library on Foursquare.
  58. Look out for the big jar of free highlighters that appears periodically at the library’s Reference Desk!
  59. You can check out headphones to use in the library at the Library Services Desk.
  60. The library has guides for many popular standardized tests, including the LSAT, GMAT, GRE, CPA, CFA, CISA, and CIFM exams.
  61. Two Bentley reference librarians have appeared on the quiz show Jeopardy!.
  62. Holding a conference call in a library group study room? You can borrow a conference phone from the Library Services Desk.
  63. The library’s catalog includes not only the collections housed in the library building, but also materials in the Center for Business Ethics and Women’s Center libraries.
  64. Wondering where the Dewey Decimal call numbers are? Like most academic libraries, Bentley uses the Library of Congress classification system—based on the books held by the Library of Congress—to organize and shelve books according to subject.
  65. The library owns copies of books written—and owned!—by Harry Bentley.
  66. Since 2004, the interlibrary loan staff has processed more than 50,000 requests.
  67. The library borrows and loans materials worldwide through interlibrary loan. Our books have travelled to Denmark, South Africa and Brazil.
  68. The Bentley book that has been requested the most through interlibrary loan is The Ancient Secret of the Flower of Life.
  69. The journal held by the Bentley Library that has been requested most often by other libraries, with more than 500 requests for articles, is the International Journal of Mobile Communications.
  70. Because some library materials are only available on microfilm, we have a microfilm reader in the Bowles Room. You can scan and save articles to a PDF or JPG file.
  71. Interlibrary loan isn’t just for books! You can request articles, DVDs, CDs, and audio books—all for free.
  72. All current Bentley students can get a library card at the Waltham Public Library.
  73. In 2010, 705,308 people walked in or out the doors of the library (did you know the security gates measure that?). That’s an average of 58,000 people per month!
  74. Bentley Library patrons checked out 53,605 items in 2010. That’s an average of 4,400 books, DVDs, and other items a month.
  75. On average, the reference librarians answer 6,000 questions a year—in person, over the phone, and through IM and email.
  76. For the 2009-2010 school year, the most circulated popular reading title was The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown. From the stacks, the book that circulated the most was Freakonomics, by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner.
  77. The library has 24 group study rooms. On a busy day in April 2011, there were 353 individual reservations for those rooms.
  78. The library has 19 staff members who do everything from answering reference questions to ordering and processing books to managing course reserves and keeping the building running smoothly. Eleven members of the staff have a master’s degree in library science, and two are Bentley alums!

Digital Voice Recorders Now Available for Borrowing

The library now has 4 digital voice recorders that may be borrowed at the Library Services Desk.  There are two types of recorders:

Olympus VN-6200PC [Check Availability]

  • Quantity: 2
  • Connects to a PC via USB
  • Compatible with Microsoft Windows 2000/XP/Vista/7 and Macintosh Mac OS X 10.2.8 – 10.5 (Jaguar, Panther, Tiger, Leopard)
  • Technical Specifications/More Information: click here
  • Borrowing Policy: One circulates for 24 hours, one circulates for 2-hours/in-library use only.

Olympus VN-6000 [Check Availability]

  • Quantity: 2
  • Note: This recorder does not have PC compatibility
  • Technical Specifications/More Information: click here
  • Borrowing Policy: One circulates for 24 hours, one circulates for 2-hours/in-library use only.

Microfilm Goes Digital

30 Day Trial of a New Microfilm Reader/Scanner ends February 12, 2010

You may be surprised to hear that microfilm is alive and well, but anyone who has conducted historical research or obtained a dissertation via Interlibrary Loan knows that microfilm is still very much a reality. The good news is that microfilm technology has changed some, and the library is currently test-driving a digital microfilm machine. This machine allows the content of microfilm to be digitally scanned to be saved, emailed and/or printed to the library printers.

We encourage you to stop by and take it for a spin.  Our trial of the machine ends February 12…please stop by the Library Services Desk before then and let us know you’d like to be introduced to the ST200X digital microfilm machine.