Your Library@CSU

CSU Library Blog

Welcome to the Charles Sturt University Library blog.
Here you will find info about new Library books and DVDs, great websites,
blogs and podcasts, Library services, recommended and new resources,
handy study tips and much more.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Highlights of This Weeks New Books

The complete list of new titles can be accessed here.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Skill build - nation build: meeting Australia's research workforce needs

This report from the Australian Technology Network of Universities (ATN) discusses the importance of an ongoing supply of quality researchers for Australia’s long term economic strength and positioning on an international scale. There is growing concern and evidence that under the status quo, demand for research‐trained graduates will outstrip supply. (Text adapted from AustralianPolicyOnline). Image: Kj. / flickr. Read the full report here


Thursday, September 23, 2010

Waste not want not ??

This paper looks at the waste data and waste management of the various states of Australia. It appears that the most successful State in this area is South Australia so the obvious question is why? Is it solely due to the work of ZeroWaste SA? Or is the awareness of waste issues heightened in South Australia by their container deposit legislation and, more recently, the ban on lightweight plastic bags?

Download the NSW Parliamentary Briefing Paper called 'Waste: Comparative Data and Management Frameworks' from here.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

World's most expensive book goes up for sale

The world's most expensive book is just about to go under the hammer at Sotheby's Art Auction House:

"A rare copy of John James Audubon's Birds of America, billed as the world's most expensive book, is to go on sale at Sotheby's, it has been announced.

"Only 119 complete copies of the 19th-century book are known to exist, and 108 are owned by museums and libraries.

"A separate edition of the wildlife book sold for a record-breaking price of $8.8m (£5.7m) a decade ago." Read the rest of this article on the BBC News website.

If you don't have a spare $8 million + dollars lying around, you could always check out Audubon's Bird's of America at the University of Pittsburgh to see what all the fuss is about.

EBook Library (EBL) downtime

The EBook Library (EBL) service will be unavailable during scheduled maintenance downtime today, Wednesday 22 September, from 3:00 - 4:30pm.

Electronic books normally available from the EBL service are listed in the CSU Library catalogue, but they will not be available during this time. Please contact the Library if you have any queries about accessing electronic books listed in the Library catalogue, or linked from your Interact subject sites.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Highlights of This Weeks New Books

The complete list of new titles can be accessed here

Library Client Survey – Last chance to win $200

The Library client survey has been extended until Friday 24th September. Don’t miss out on this opportunity to let us know what you think of your library. Complete the survey available from the Library website and you can go into the draw to win $200AUD.

Is there something that really irks you about the Library? Do you love something that we do? What would you change about us if you could? We need to know what you think of us so that we can do less of what you don't like and more of what you do.

Whether you’re studying by Distance Education within Australia or overseas, or you are an internal student on a CSU campus, please fill in the survey questionnaire and tell us what you think!

Remember, it's your library so what you think really matters, and your feedback makes a difference - check out what actions we took based on the 2008 satisfaction survey.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Latest Library Newsletter

Like to keep up to date with Library News? The September 2010 edition of the CSU Library Newsletter is now available.
Topics covered this month include:
  • Library Client Survey
  • CSU Research update
  • Community Walk-In Access to selected Library databases
  • Strengthening Community Networks
  • Colour Copying Now available
  • New eResources
  • plus heaps more...................

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Australia's hidden homeless: community-based approaches to asylum seeker homelessness

The complex immigration status of asylum seekers applying for protection, combined with having to compete with Australian residents for government-funded housing, can result in multiple barriers to secure housing for refugees.
The majority of asylum seekers in Australia live lawfully in the community on bridging visas while they await resolution of their asylum claims. More than half of these asylum seekers have no access to a government-funded financial safety net or a sustained independent income. As this research demonstrates, many experience homelessness as a result. (Text adapted from AustralianPolicyOnline). Read the full report here

Monday, September 13, 2010

Highlights of This Weeks New Books

  • Newspaper journalism - With the newspaper's role in a state of fundamental redefinition, Newspaper Journalism offers a timely and up to the minute analysis of newspapers today. Check Availability
The complete list of new titles can be accessed here

Thursday, September 09, 2010

Library Client Survey 2010 – your chance to win $200 AUD

Is there something that really irks you about the Library? Do you love something that we do? What would you change about us if you could? We need to know what you think of us so that we can do less of what you don't like and more of what you do.

The Library Client survey runs from Monday 6th September until Friday 17th September, and is available on the Library Web site.

Whether you’re studying by Distance Education within Australia or overseas, or you are an internal student on a CSU campus, please fill in the survey questionnaire, and be in the running to win one of three $200 AUD prizes.

Remember, it's your library so what you think really matters, and your feedback makes a difference.

Wednesday, September 08, 2010

Support for Flood-Affected Staff and Students

The Division of Library Services supports all CSU staff and students affected by the recent floods.

If you are experiencing difficulty with the delivery of requested library material or the return of library items, please call 1800 808 369.

Tuesday, September 07, 2010

All in the Delivery

From Inside Higher Ed:

With another summer ending, the time has come to ask the perennial question: Could this be the year higher education finally embraces the e-book?

Some think that developments since the last buying cycle, particularly the arrival of Apple's iPad computing tablet, might foreshadow an especially good year for the electronic texts. CourseSmart, the e-textbook consortium comprising five major publishers, says it has sold four times more e-textbooks in 2009-10 than it did the previous year.

Others are more skeptical about whether e-books will finally boom after years of stalled progress. “They’ve been saying that for the last 10 years,” says Nicole Allen, an advocate for the Student Public Interest Research Groups (PIRGs).

One reason it is difficult to parse the prospects for e-books this year is that many other things are happening in the textbook market that make "traditional textbook vs. e-book" a false dichotomy. These days, traditional books have electronic supplements; some electronic texts have print-on-demand options; and for many students, textbook decisions have more to do with renting vs. buying than print vs. digital.

The explosive growth of online education seems to imply a mainstream acceptance of the computer screen as medium for instruction. And then there is the widely accepted argument that printed textbooks, like other analog vessels, belong to an economic model that no longer makes sense.

Read the full article here

Monday, September 06, 2010

Investing in children's development: The importance of early relationships


This paper from the Benevolent Society outlines why it is so important for families, workers and communities to support children’s early development through warm, nurturing care, particularly for children living in families and communities that are under stress because of poverty, violence and discrimination. Children that have secure relationships with their parents are more able to regulate their own emotions, learn through exploration and cope with difficulties when they arise. (Text adapted from AustralianPolicyOnline) Read the full text here
Image from the Report.

Wednesday, September 01, 2010

Indigenous Literacy Day 2010

Today, 1 September 2010, is Indigenous Literacy Day; a day that aims to help raise funds and awareness to raise literacy levels and improve the lives and opportunities of Indigenous Australians living in remote and isolated regions. (Source: The Indigenous Literacy Project)

"Can you imagine not being able to read a newspaper, a road sign or directions on a bottle of medication? Sadly, this is a reality faced by many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders living in remote communities today." (Source: The Indigenous Literacy Project)