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Xmas Holidays, Thesis Submission and January Elevenses

Xmas Holidays This is our last blog post before the Xmas Holidays. Remember that there will be no research librarians available during the University Closure days - from 12noon on Thursday 22nd December until we return on Tuesday 3rd January. If you need to see a research librarian before Xmas then you will need to make a morning appointment with Selina by emailing librarians@le.ac.uk The library building will still be open on some days over Xmas - check the opening hours . Thesis Submission If you wish to be included in the January graduation ceremony you must have submitted an eThesis and completed/signed Final Submission Form to the Library, along with a copy of your bound thesis or confirmation that your bound thesis will be delivered to us by Print Services in the New Year. All theses submitted during the closed period will be confirmed with the Graduate School Office on 3rd January 2017 and will be eligible for the January ceremony. For more information on submitt...

Research Elevenses: our greatest hits

This week I've been finalising the next Research Elevenses series for January 2017.  Elevenses is our seminar series that provides briefings for researchers on the issues that matter. These can about new tools for research, policy updates, or methods of discovering information.  We will reveal the January program next week. Before we do, I thought I would take a look at the 'greatest hits'.  We record and republish the talks to share them widely. The viewing stats reveal that the following are the Top 5 most viewed recordings.  Click on the links below to watch the videos.  1. Unlocking the REF: Text mining to show your impact https://connect.le.ac.uk/p79lknoeq43/ 2. How can we help with your systematic review? https://connect.le.ac.uk/p4myej25euo/ 3. Demonstrating your impact   with the h-index https://connect.le.ac.uk/p51ud1gxajs/ 4. Making an (online) exhibition of yourself with Omeka.net https://connect...

PGR and Staff Training in the New Year

Bookings are now open for our Spring workshops: Introduction to the Library Introduction to reference management Introduction to research data management Planning your literature search - online version Conducting your literature search - online version Introduction to EndNote - online tutorial Introducing RefWorks - online tutorial Pubmed vs Medline Who is citing who? - video version Making research information come to you - online version Advanced literature searching - booking form Search Strategies for Systematic Reviews in Medicine and Psychology - booking form Tools for note taking Finding grey literature Looking After Your Research Material: An Introduction to Research Data Management (RDM) and Data Management Plans (DMPs) - booking form Advanced Endnote - online tutorial [PDF] Advanced RefWorks - online tutorial Open Access: what you need to know Introduction to Prezi Finding images for research Copyright and your thesis Building interactive timel...

Library publishing services

The Library offers several services to help you publish and disseminate your research. We can help you publish reports, journals and conference proceedings. We also support the publishing of digital collections. Research publications  The Library can help you to publish one-off reports in an open access format. See this example  from the  SAPPHIRE Group in Health Sciences .  If you want to start a new open access journal or conference proceedings, we have our own version of Open Journal Systems (OJS). This is journal management and publishing platform for academic  publications. Articles published through this system are free to any reader, and no APCs are charged to authors.  Please contact Library Research Services for more information: librarians@le.ac.uk Digital collections  Some researchers will be collecting materials as part of a project, and may want to publish them online. The Lib...

Finding University of Leicester & UK Theses

Finding University of Leicester Theses Browse the theses in your Department If you want to look at previous theses within your Department or subject then choose the 'Research Archive' search on the library homepage and search on 'your department theses' e.g. This will open the Leicester Research Archive - scroll down and you will see the Theses Collection for the Department: You can then browse the theses: If you would like to read or download a particular thesis - click on the link and scroll down to the PDF option: You will then be able to read or download the thesis unless it has an embargo in place, in which case the record will state there is an embargo: Search by keyword or author Go to the Leicester Research Archive homepage:  https://lra.le.ac.uk/ Use the search box in the top right hand corner: Finding UK Theses Try searching: EThOS - Electronic Theses Online System  which is available via the Brit...

Books for your research

  We have a large book collection at Leicester -  print and electronic. But we don't have everything. If you need titles that we don't have, there are three ways to get hold of books: * Don't forget to check the  Library catalogue  first * 1.     More Books     More Books  is our scheme where you can request books for the Library to buy. This can be books we don't have,  or books you think we need to have more copies of. The service is for in-print titles that are relevant for your research.  Click on  the link , login with your IT username and password, and then fill in as much of the form as you can. It is free to place a request.  We aim to respond to you within 24 hours. We can't guarantee to buy everything; but we take all suggestions seriously and use them to help plan the collections.  2.     Document Supply Sometimes it may be better to plac...

Accessing journal articles

You have a reference for a journal article - how do you check whether we have access to it? Check Library Search Search for the article title in the library search on the library homepage   If the library has access to the article it should be one of the first search results:    Click on View It   Click on the link next to "Full text available at:" - this will take you to the full text of the article to read or download. I can't find it via Library Search - what next?  Check Google Scholar for an open access version Search for the article on Google Scholar. If there is an open access version available then a link or PDF link will be provided:   Don't forget that you can also link Google Scholar to library resources . It's not available via the library or Google Scholar - what next? Place a document supply request PGR/PhD students and staff are allowed 25 free document supply requests per year. The library will ...