Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Educational Media Collection Becomes Part of the Media Center

To better serve the University of Washington community and beyond, the Educational Media Collection (EMC), of Classroom Support Services, a division of the Office of Undergraduate Academic Affairs, has been transferred to the University Libraries. The EMC is a diverse, historical collection of between 6,000 - 7,000 titles covering a wide range of educational topics in formats such as 16mm, VHS, laserdisc, DVD, and audio tape. In the past, only educational (K-20) instructors and government agencies were able to use or rent titles from the EMC for in-classroom and instructional use. It is the University Libraries' goal, whenever legally and operationally possible, to make all of its holding as widely accessible as possible.

We believe that merging the EMC into the University Libraries will expand media instruction and research opportunities, as well as consolidate media discovery tools, for researchers and scholars. As with other media in the Libraries collection, the Media Center will restrict lending of the EMC to University Library borrowers and to Orbis Cascade Alliance borrowers. Due to the uniqueness or fragility of certain titles, some titles may be restricted to "Library Use Only." Similarly, due to the fragility of the 16mm films, these items will no longer be available for viewing. However, the University Libraries and Classroom Support Services will seek out and acquire--if possible-- copies of select 16mm films on such formats as DVD and VHS. Please contact the Media Center with questions about viewing the EMC's 16mm film content.

The EMC web site will remain active until all of the EMC titles are processed. The processing, locating, and reformatting of the titles will be done over time, but as a first step, the DVD and VHS tapes were moved to the University Libraries Media Center on December 15, 2008 and will be available for circulation upon request. For a list of holdings, please consult the EMC website (http://www.css.washington.edu/emc/) and forward all requests for titles to the Media Center at medialib@u.washington.edu or via phone at 206-543-6051.

Updates and other information about the EMC's integration into the Media Center's collections will be posted here: http://www.css.washington.edu/emc/

For questions, contact John Vallier (vallier@u.washington.edu) or Jill McKinstry (jillmck@u.washington.edu)

Friday, December 26, 2008

Friday 12/26 - UW Libraries OPEN

Today--December 26, 2008--the University Libraries resumes normal operations. The Media Center is open, as scheduled, 9am - 5pm.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Wednesday 12/24 - UW Libraries Closed

Due to the inclement weather, the University has suspended operations at UW Bothell, UW Tacoma, and UW Seattle for Wednesday, December 24. *No* libraries will open.

Monday, December 22, 2008

Tuesday 12/23 - UW Libraries Closed

Due to the inclement weather, the University has suspended operations at UW Bothell, UW Tacoma, and UW Seattle for Tuesday, December 23. *No* libraries will open.

Monday 12/22 - UW Libraries Closed

Due to the inclement weather, the University has suspended operations at UW Bothell, UW Tacoma, and UW Seattle for Monday, December 22. *No* libraries will open, and the Libraries home page has been updated to indicate the closures.

Friday, December 19, 2008

Media Center to close at 3pm today

The Seattle campus libraries (including the Media Center and Odegaard Library) will close at 3:00 pm today, Friday, December 19, 2008, due to inclement weather.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Media Center & Odegaard Library to Close @ 3pm


The Seattle campus libraries (including the Media Center and Odegaard Library) will close at 3:00 pm today, Thursday, December 18, 2008, due to snow. No word yet about operations tomorrow.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

New for December

Check out our new lists just posted for December:
CDs, VHS, and DVDs

In particular, we just received a bunch of new local music additions to our Puget Sounds collection. Classic grunge-era relics such as Alice in Chains, Mudhoney, Hammerbox, 7 Year Bitch, the Gits, Screaming Trees, and the Posies. As well as more current music from the Microphones, Jason Webley, the Gossip, Jesse Sykes, Smoosh, and Maktub. Make sure to catch Mark Johnson's Big Metal Boxes record which features local sounds recorded with condenser microphones placed within shipping containers. While you're at it, check out Glasselan which features percussion music played on Chihuly and Oceana glass.


If you're a local artist interested in joining this growing collection, send an email to John Vallier (vallier@u.washington.edu).