Category Archives: Databases

Goodbye to InfoTrac/Academic OneFile, Hello to EBSCOhost/Academic Search Complete

EBSCOhost

As of July 1, the Gale/InfoTrac databases that have been provided to all state colleges and universities through the VIVA consortium will no longer be available.

We are pleased to announce that in their place will be 25 new EBSCOhost databases that cover similar areas and disciplines. We are excited about this VIVA purchase, which will provide access to more peer-reviewed journals plus significantly more coverage in the areas of business and education.

What is EBSCOhost?

You are familiar with the EBSCOhost interface through the following databases that the library already offers: America: History & Life, Art Abstracts (which replaces Bibliography of the History of Art), CINAHL, Communication & Mass Media Complete, ERIC, Greenfile, Historical Abstracts, International Political Science Abstracts, Medline, Library Literature & Information Science, LISTA, Mental Measurements Yearbook, PsycArticles, PsycInfo, and SportDiscus.

Which Gale/InfoTrac databases are going away, and what should I use instead?

  • Academic OneFile (use Academic Search Complete instead)
  • General OneFile (use MasterFILE Premier instead)
  • General Reference Center Gold (use MasterFILE Premier instead)
  • Business & Company Resource Center (use Business Source Complete instead)
  • Business Index ASAP (use Business Source Complete instead)
  • General BusinessFile ASAP (use Business Source Complete instead)
  • Computer Database ASAP (use Computers & Applied Sciences Complete instead)
  • Health & Wellness Resource Center (use Health Source: Consumer Edition instead)
  • Health Reference Center Academic (use Health Source: Nursing/Academic Edition instead)

Links or bookmarks to full-text articles in these Gale/InfoTrac databases will not work after July 1.

What new EBSCOhost databases will be available?

  • Academic Search Complete
  • Alt HealthWatch
  • Associates Programs Source
  • Business Source Complete
  • Computers & Applied Sciences Complete
  • Consumer Health Complete
  • Economía y Negocios
  • Education Research Complete
  • Environment Complete
  • Fuente Académica
  • Health Source: Consumer Edition
  • Health Source: Nursing/Academic Edition
  • Hospitality & Tourism Complete
  • Humanities International Complete
  • Legal Collection
  • MasterFILE Premier
  • MedicLatina
  • Military & Government Collection
  • Newspaper Source Plus
  • Psychology & Behavioral Sciences Collection
  • Regional Business News
  • Religion & Psychology Collection
  • Salud en Espanol
  • Vente et Gestion
  • Women’s Studies International

Descriptions and links to these new resources are on the Databases A-Z page and the subject-specific Research Guides.

Why is this change occurring?

VIVA, the Virtual Library of Virginia, is the consortium of nonprofit academic libraries within the Commonwealth of Virginia. Members include all of Virginia’s state-assisted colleges and universities, as well as 33 private, nonprofit institutions and the Library of Virginia. After careful consideration, VIVA decided to award a new contract for multidisciplinary and subject databases to EBSCOhost.

If you have any questions about access to or use of these new databases, please contact your librarian liaison or call the Information Desk at x2435.

EBSCO Publishing/EBSCOhost is the registered trademark of EBSCO Publishing.

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VIVA Cancels Databases Because of Budget Cuts

VIVA has announced that it will cancel three databases and two full-text journal resources because of state budget cuts:

  • Associations Unlimited (12/14/07)
  • Biography & Geneaology Master Index (12/14/07)
  • LexisNexis Statistical (2/28/08)
  • Cambridge Journals Online& (12/18/07)
  • Duke University Press Journals (12/31/07)

The Greenwood Library will not be picking up these subscriptions due to our budget cuts, so access to these resources will terminate on the indicated end date.

The library’s subscription to Wilson Biographies Plus Illustrated will continue to provide online biographical information. STAT-USA and Historical Statistics of the United States will serve as alternate online sources of U.S. statistical data.

Cambridge and Duke journals for which the library maintains a paid subscription will still be accessible in the format indicated by the individual title subscription terms. Interlibrary loan will be the only way to obtain articles in the 190 Cambridge University Press journals for which the library has no other access.

Women’s History Month Online Resources

The Greenwood Library has free access to three full-text collections of primary sources related to women’s studies from Alexander Street Press during the month of March. These may be accessed from on-campus locations through March 31:

  • British and Irish Women’s Letters and Diaries contain the personal writings, many of them previously unpublished, of women from England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales from 1500 through the 1950s, including recently acquired items from the Imperial War Museum in London.
  • North American Women’s Letters and Diaries draws from more than 1,000 sources to document the views of women in the U.S. and Canada on personal experiences and historical events from colonial times to the 1950s.
  • Women and Social Movements in the U.S. examines perspectives on women’s social activism from colonial times to the present by combining primary documents and images with scholarly essays.

Other resources available on the Women’s Studies Databases page include three full-text databases: Contemporary Women’s Issues, Women Working 1870-1930, and the Women’s Studies Encyclopedia.

Black History Month Online Resources

The Greenwood Library has free access to three full-text collections of fiction and non-fiction writings by African Americans from Alexander Street Press during the month of February. These may be accessed from on-campus locations through February 28:

  • Black Drama contains approximately 1200 plays by 201 playwrights as well as selected playbills, production photographs and other ephemera related to the plays.
  • Black Thought and Culture contains letters, speeches, essays, political leaflets, trial transcripts, and interviews of important African Americans, including 2,500 pages of exclusive Black Panther oral histories.
  • Black Women Writers contains fiction, nonfiction and poetry by women from North America, Africa and the Caribbean plus genre studies and essays about the history of the feminist movement in these regions.

The Library also has continuing access to the Schomburg Studies on the Black Experience, which chronicles the African experience in the Americas through scholarly essays, research, primary sources, timelines, video clips and images on multidisciplinary topics such as black women’s studies, religion, black cinema, the black press, African-American labor history, slavery, and sexuality.

Shakespeare Collection

The Greenwood Library has purchased perpetual access to Thomson Gale’s Shakespeare Collection online database. The Shakespeare Collection brings together general reference data, full-text scholarly periodicals, reprinted criticism, primary source material such as the Prompt Books and the Gordon Crosse Theatrical Diary, and the full-text annotated works from The Arden Shakespeare. Dr. Shawn Smith, Assistant Professor of English, was impressed by the photographs and paintings relevant to Shakespearean studies as well as by the wealth of primary and critical material. Comments from his students during a trial of the database last spring include:

  • I found the images section helpful because I do enjoy seeing the way people stage things.
  • One of my favorite things about the site was the section called historical texts in which you can view pictures of older texts.
  • Having the plays, sonnets, etc. online in full text was GREAT.
  • I really like the way the footnotes are set up in a separate little window. This is immensely helpful as you can read and have the notes right next to the text.

The Shakespeare Collection will be useful not only to English majors but also to the theatre department and any classes studying sixteenth- and seventeenth-century history and religion.

Thousands of E-Books Now Available Through NetLibrary

The Greenwood Library now has access to over 11,000 e-books. Most of these are in the recently acquired NetLibrary Shared Collection V, which includes full-text versions of over 6,000 recent books such as reference works, scholarly monographs, literature and fiction as well as 3,400 titles from Project Gutenberg, BiblioBytes and other publicly-accessible digital libraries. Many of the NetLibrary titles are listed in the online catalog; all of the NetLibrary e-books can be searched by keyword, subject, author, title or full-text from the NetLibrary database interface. Longwood users may create a personal NetLibrary account to save favorite e-books with custom notes.

Other e-book collections available at the Greenwood Library include:

  • Gale Virtual Reference Library (a growing collection of online subject encyclopedias and reference works)
  • History E-Book Project (over 1,000 current and out-of-print books on American, Asian, European, Latin American, African, and Middle Eastern history)
  • Oxford Reference Online (over 140 Oxford University Press current reference books on a broad range of topics, including bilingual and subject-specific dictionaries as well as world maps and flags)
  • Safari Tech Books Online (200 recent technology books from major IT publishers, including O’Reilly and The Pearson Technology Group, browseable by category or search by keyword or code fragment)
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Spring Database Trials

The Greenwood Library has several database trials available. Click one of the links before for more information and access to the database:

  • Book Review Index Online – until April 19
  • KCDL (Kraus Curriculum Development Library – until April 1
  • Opposing Viewpoints Resource Center – until April 19
  • Safari Tech Books Online – until April 24
  • Shakespeare Collection – until April 19
  • Women and Social Movements – until April 15

Schomburg Studies on the Black Experience

The Greenwood Library is a Charter Subscriber to the Schomburg Studies on the Black Experience, an online resource developed collaboratively by Proquest Information and Learning, Howard Dodson, Chief of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture of the New York Public Library, and Colin Palmer, Dodge Professor of History at Princeton University and Managing Editor of the project. The Schomburg Studies database chronicles the African experience in the Americas through scholarly essays, key research, primary sources, timelines, video clips and images. The essays cover multidisciplinary topics such as black women’s studies, religion, black cinema, the black press, African-American labor history, slavery, and sexuality. As a Charter Subscriber, the Library also has access to the International Index of Black Periodicals Full Text, covering cultural, economic, historical, religious, social, and political issues related to Black Studies in scholarly journals and newsletters from the U.S., Africa and the Caribbean.