Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Middletown Book Discussion Title for March

The MUM Book Discussion group will next meet on Tuesday, March 28 to discuss Susan Vreeland's The Forest Lover as part of Women's History Month.  We will meet at 12 pm in Room 124 in the Library. 

Here is a brief summary of the title, along with links to request the book from Miami, OhioLINK, and SearchOhio libraries (Just click "Request" and choose "Miami University" from the dropdown list.  Then enter your UniqueID and password, and the library from which you would like to retrieve the item):  

"It was Emily Carr (1871-1945) - not Georgia O'Keeffe or Frida Kahlo - who first blazed a path for modern women artists. Overcoming the confines of late Victorian culture, Carr became a major force in modern art. Her boldly original landscapes are praised today for capturing an untamed British Columbia and its indigenous peoples just before industrialization would change it forever.  Susan Vreeland brings to life this fiercely independent and underappreciated figure. From illegal potlatches in tribal communities to prewar Paris, where her art was exhibited in the famed Salon d'Automne, Carr's story is as arresting as it is vibrant. Vreeland tells it with gusto and suspense, giving vivid portraits of Carr and the unconventional people to whom she was inevitably drawn: Sophie, a native basket maker; Harold, the son of missionaries, who embraces indigenous cultures; Fanny, a New Zealand artist who spends a summer with Carr painting in the French countryside; and Claude, a French fur trader who steals her heart. The result is a glorious novel that will appeal to lovers of art, native cultures, and lush historical fiction."


Read the book (or read something else interesting), then come along to our discussion to share what else you've been reading/watching/listening to/experiencing, and help us plan our future readings.  

Have an idea for a book to discuss?  Let us know and check out our page of past and future reads at http://www.mid.muohio.edu/library/bookdiscussion.htm

Thursday, February 16, 2017

Creating Stained Glass Objects with Dr. David Long at the TEC Lab!



On Tuesday, March 14, come to the TEC Lab to watch our guest artist, Dr. David Long, display and create beautiful stained glass objects.  You'll also be able to create a simple stained glass object of your own.

Dr. Long will be on hand from 12pm-1pm to show his work and answer questions.

Just stop by the TEC Lab in Room 125 in the Gardner-Harvey Library and learn to make something exciting and useful. All are welcome to attend this free event.

Remember, if you attend two or more of our TEC Lab workshops and speaker events in Spring 2017, you will be entered in a drawing for a Kindle Fire tablet.


The above image was provided through a Creative Commons CC-BY-2.0 license by oatsy40.

Spring Forward by Building a Clock from a Record or CD at the TEC Lab!


On Wednesday, March 1, come to the TEC Lab to recycle a record album or CD into a clock!  That's right, you can walk away having built your own distinctive clock with a musical theme.  You'll be all the more excited to Spring your clock forward on March 12!

This exciting creative opportunity will be available from both 11am-1pm AND 6pm-8pm. 

Just stop by the TEC Lab in Room 125 in the Gardner-Harvey Library and learn to make something exciting and useful. All are welcome to attend this free event. 

To ensure that we have enough albums, CDs, and clock parts, please RSVP to Jennifer Hicks at hicksjl2@miamioh.edu (though we will have some spare sets available if you just want to drop in).

Remember, if you attend two or more of our TEC Lab workshops and speaker events in Spring 2017, you will be entered in a drawing for a Kindle Fire tablet.


The above image was provided through a Creative Commons CC-BY-2.0 license by Tony Alter.

Yellowstone National Park (National Parks with Dr. Tammie Gerke)


National Parks with Dr. Tammie Gerke

A new speaking series presented by the Gardner Harvey Library and  Dr. Tammie Gerke - a professor of Geology at Miami University Regionals.

In our inaugural session, Dr. Tammie Gerke will be discussing Yellowstone National Park.  Stop by to hear about the geology of Yellowstone as well as some other interesting information about the park.  Each session will focus on a different national park.

This session will run March 15th from 4:30pm to 5:30pm with time after for questions and discussion.  The event will be held in the Open Seating Area at the entrance of the Gardner-Harvey Library.

All are welcome to attend.  Light refreshments will be provided.

Remember, if you attend two or more of our TEC Lab workshops and speaker events in Spring 2017, you will be entered in a drawing for a Kindle Fire tablet.

The above image was provided through a Creative Commons CC-BY-2.0 license by edward stojakovic.


Monday, February 06, 2017

Come discuss Hillbilly Elegy with Caryn Neumann and Lori Parks!


The day before J.D. Vance delivers his Casper Lecture, there will be a discussion of his book Hillbilly Elegy, led by Caryn Neumann (Interdisciplinary and Communication Studies) and Lori Parks (Humanities and Creative Arts).

The event will be held on Wednesday, March 8 from Noon to 1:00pm in Room 124, Gardner-Harvey Library.

This is a great opportunity to talk about Vance's book with other insightful readers.  Have you read it and have a question to ask or a thought to share?  Have you wanted to read it, but haven't had the time?  Come to this session and learn some perspectives on this book about Appalachia, working class whites, Middletown, social mobility, and more.

All are welcome to attend.  Light refreshments will be served.

Remember, if you attend two or more of our TEC Lab workshops and speaker events in Spring 2017, you will be entered in a drawing for a Kindle Fire tablet.

Friday, February 03, 2017

Basic Sewing and Mending with Dr. Tammie Gerke in the TEC Lab!


Join us in the Gardner Harvey Library TEC Lab on Tuesday, February 21 to learn about basic sewing and mending techniques by Miami’s very own Geology Professor Tammie Gerke.

There will be two one hour sessions, starting at 1:00 and then at 2:00pm, covering the basics so that next time you need to add a button or stitch a hole in your shirt, you will have the skills to save your clothing!

If you would like to learn specific techniques, Dr. Gerke has sweet skills with hand sewing as well as sewing machines she would love to share. Bring an item you would like to repair, or stop in and we will have sample pieces to work with.

All are welcome to attend.

Remember, if you attend two or more of our TEC Lab workshops and speaker events in Spring 2017, you will be entered in a drawing for a Kindle Fire tablet.

Wednesday, February 01, 2017

New books added to the Gardner-Harvey Library in January!

See our new materials list of items we added to the collection in January! We added 173 books, e-books, DVDs, and other items during that time, thanks to your selections and suggestions. The list is sorted by call number, with items grouped roughly by subject area.

Here are eight titles from the list, to give you an idea of what we've been buying:
  • The less you know, the better you sleep : Russia's road to terror and dictatorship under Yeltsin and Putin / David Satter
  • Letters to a young Muslim / Omar Saif Ghobash
  • Toussaint Louverture : a revolutionary life / Philippe Girard
  • In the company of women : inspiration and advice from over 100 makers, artists, and entrepreneurs / by Grace Bonney
  • Transgender communication studies : histories, trends, and trajectories / edited by Jamie C. Capuzza and Leland G. Spencer
  • The explosion chronicles / Yan Lianke 
  • Transit / Rachel Cusk
  • A survival guide to the misinformation age : scientific habits of mind / David J. Helfand
This tag will show you all of the prior lists of new materials, in reverse chronological order. We are eager to hear from you about individual items you would like us to buy, or types of items we should be on the lookout for, or general subject areas we should build up in the collection. Your input will help us keep the collection working well as we add items during the remainder of the 2016/17 academic year  We're looking forward to what you'll recommend next!

If you have a suggestion of something to order, please use our "Tell GHL to Buy It" form, email Amy Carmichael (carmicae@miamioh.edu), or drop by the library with your request. And pass your general suggestions or comments about the collection to us in those same ways.

Thanks again for keeping our collection vibrant and your information needs met!

Friday, January 20, 2017

We welcome you back to the library for spring with free beverages all week!

We welcome you back to the Gardner-Harvey Library this spring!

Come see our new spaces and enjoy a cup of coffee, tea, hot cocoa, or lemonade during the first week of classes.  We'll have beverages available from Monday, January 23 to Friday, January 27.

If you thought our summer changes were big, come see what's happened over the break and Winter Term!

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Make what you love, and love what you make at the TEC Lab!

Whether you've found that special someone, or are still searching, or are just done with that whole "two hearts that beat as one" thing, we've got a creative experience for you!

On Wednesday, February 1, come to the TEC Lab to try out three creative activities and walk away with a gift or ideas on other things you could make.  Here's what we'll be making:

  • Burn your message in a wooden heart or other wooden item
  • Create a customized 3D printed keychain.
  • Make a rose from, wait for it . . . duct tape!
These exciting opportunities will be available from both 11am-1pm AND 6pm-8pm.  Just stop by the TEC Lab in Room 125 in the Gardner-Harvey Library and learn to make something exciting.  All are welcome to attend this free event.  


Remember, if you attend two or more of our TEC Lab workshops and speaker events in Spring 2017, you will be entered in a drawing for a Kindle Fire tablet.


The above image was provided through a Creative Commons CC-BY-2.0 license by Mark Bonica.

Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Middletown Book Discussion Title for February

The MUM Book Discussion group will next meet on Tuesday, February 28 to discuss Sheila Hancock's Miss Carter's War.  We will meet at 12 pm in Room 124 in the Library. 

Here is a brief summary of the title, along with links to request the book from Miami, OhioLINK, and SearchOhio libraries (Just click "Request" and choose "Miami University" from the dropdown list.  Then enter your UniqueID and password, and the library from which you would like to retrieve the item):  

"It is 1948 and Britain is struggling to recover from the Second World War. Half French, half English, Marguerite Carter has lost her parents and survived a terrifying war, working for the SOE behind enemy lines. Leaving her partisan lover she returns to England to be one of the first women to receive a degree from the University of Cambridge...Now she sets out towards her future as an English teacher in a girls' grammar school. For Miss Carter has a mission - to fight social injustice, to prevent war and to educate her girls...Through deep friendships and love lost and found, from the peace marches of the fifties and the flowering of the Swinging Sixties, to the rise of Thatcher and the battle for gay rights, to the spectre of a new war, Sheila Hancock has created a powerful, panoramic portrait of Britain through the life of one very singular woman."


Read the book (or read something else interesting), then come along to our discussion to share what else you've been reading/watching/listening to/experiencing, and help us plan our future readings.  

Have an idea for a book to discuss?  Let us know and check out our page of past and future reads at http://www.mid.muohio.edu/library/bookdiscussion.htm

Monday, January 02, 2017

New books added to the Gardner-Harvey Library in December!

See our new materials list of items we added to the collection in December! We added 152 books, e-books, DVDs, and other items during that time, thanks to your selections and suggestions. The list is sorted by call number, with items grouped roughly by subject area.

Here are eight titles from the list, to give you an idea of what we've been buying:
  • The 100-year life : living and working in an age of longevity / Lynda Gratton and Andrew Scott
  • Fannie never flinched : one woman's courage in the struggle for American labor union rights / Mary Cronk Farrell
  • We were one : shoulder to shoulder with the Marines who took Fallujah / Patrick K. O'Donnell
  • Thank you for being late : an optimist's guide to thriving in the age of accelerations / Thomas L. Friedman
  • Good neighbors : the democracy of everyday life in America / Nancy L. Rosenblum
  • Chickenizing farms and food : how industrial meat production endangers workers, animals, and consumers / Ellen K. Silbergeld
  • Born a crime : stories from a South African childhood / Trevor Noah
  • Stone coffin : a mystery / Kjell Eriksson
This tag will show you all of the prior lists of new materials, in reverse chronological order. We are eager to hear from you about individual items you would like us to buy, or types of items we should be on the lookout for, or general subject areas we should build up in the collection. Your input will help us keep the collection working well as we add items during the remainder of the 2016/17 academic year  We're looking forward to what you'll recommend next!

If you have a suggestion of something to order, please use our "Tell GHL to Buy It" form, email Amy Carmichael (carmicae@miamioh.edu), or drop by the library with your request. And pass your general suggestions or comments about the collection to us in those same ways.

Thanks again for keeping our collection vibrant and your information needs met!

Thursday, December 08, 2016

Enjoy a hot beverage and mints while you study at the Library!


The Library will offer free coffee, tea, hot cocoa, and mints all during finals week, starting on Saturday, December 10th. It will be set up in our entrance area from roughly 12:00pm to 4:00pm on Saturday, 8:00am to 8:00pm, Monday through Thursday, and from 8:00am to 5:00pm on Friday. Please drop on by and enjoy a cup!

It's our way of making your last minute studying and paper/project preparation a bit more relaxing. Thanks for being a part of our library community!


The image above was provided through a Creative Commons CC-BY-2.0 license by Ian Brown.

Thursday, December 01, 2016

Library Open on the Saturday Before Finals (December 10)

To help you prepare for final exams, the Gardner-Harvey Library will offer extra study hours to students on Saturday, December 10, 2016. We will be open from Noon until 4:00pm that day.

If you need a quiet place to study, please come to the library and use our computers and our study rooms. Staff will be on hand to provide assistance.

Coffee, tea, hot chocolate, lemonade, and mints will be available to help you stay aware and awake.


New Books added to the Gardner-Harvey Library in November!

See our new materials list of items we added to the collection in November! We added 88 books, e-books, DVDs, and other items during that time, thanks to your selections and suggestions. The list is sorted by call number, with items grouped roughly by subject area.

Here are seven titles from the list, to give you an idea of what we've been buying:
  • A field guide to lies : critical thinking in the information age / Daniel J. Levitin
  • A more beautiful question : the power of inquiry to spark breakthrough ideas
  • Global inequality : a new approach for the age of globalization / Branko Milanovic
  • Swing time / Zadie Smith
  • The secret life of the periodic table : unlocking the mysteries of all 118 elements
  • What have we done : the moral injury of our longest wars / David Wood
  • Bridge of words : Esperanto and the dream of a universal language / Esther Schor
This tag will show you all of the prior lists of new materials, in reverse chronological order. We are eager to hear from you about individual items you would like us to buy, or types of items we should be on the lookout for, or general subject areas we should build up in the collection. Your input will help us keep the collection working well as add items in 2016/17!  We're looking forward to what you'll recommend next.

If you have a suggestion of something to order, please use our "Tell GHL to Buy It" form, email Amy Carmichael (carmicae@miamioh.edu), or drop by the library with your request. And pass your general suggestions or comments about the collection to us in those same ways.

Thanks again for keeping our collection vibrant and your information needs met!

Middletown Book Discussion Titles for January

The MUM Book Discussion group will next meet on Tuesday, January 10 to discuss not one, but two books:  Lucy Grealy's Autobiography of a Face and Ann Patchett's Truth and Beauty: A Friendship.  We will meet at 12 pm in Room 124 in the Library. These books in turn chronicle a woman's fight against cancer and a great friendship that grew during that battle.  

Here is a brief summary of each title, along with links to request the book from Miami, OhioLINK, and SearchOhio libraries (Just click "Request" and choose "Miami University" from the dropdown list.  Then enter your UniqueID and password, and the library from which you would like to retrieve the item):  

"This powerful memoir is about the premium we put on beauty and on a woman's face in particular. It took Lucy Grealy twenty years of living with a distorted self-image and more than thirty reconstructive procedures before she could come to terms with her appearance after childhood cancer and surgery that left her jaw disfigured. As a young girl, she absorbed the searing pain of peer rejection and the paralyzing fear of never being loved."


"The author describes her twenty-year friendship with Lucy Grealy, tracing their introduction at a writer's workshop, the integral part their friendship played in their writing careers, and her witness to Grealy's medical deterioration."


Read one, or read both over these last weeks of the semester and Winter break (or read something else interesting).  Then come along to our discussion to share what else you've been reading/watching/listening to/experiencing, and help us plan our future readings.  

Have an idea for a book to discuss?  Let us know and check out our page of past and future reads at http://www.mid.muohio.edu/library/bookdiscussion.htm

Thursday, November 17, 2016

Make a Hologram Projector for your Phone at the TEC Lab!


Join us on Wednesday, December 7 from 11:00am-1:00pm or 6:00-8:00pm to make a hologram projector for your phone or tablet!  

You use your phone for a lot of things, but did you know it can project holograms?   These 3D images can jump out of your phone with the creation of a hologram projector.  We'll give you the plans and materials to create your own, and guide you on where you can find holograms to display and amaze your friends and yourself!

All are welcome to attend.  Come to the TEC Lab in Room 125 in the Gardner-Harvey Library.

Remember,  if you attend two or more of our TEC Lab workshops and speaker events in Fall 2016, you will be entered in a drawing for a Kindle Fire tablet.

Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Middletown Book Discussion Title for November (again)

The MUM Book Discussion group will next meet on Tuesday, November 29 to discuss Katarina Bivald's book The Readers of Broken Wheel Recommend.  We will meet at 12 pm in Room 124 in the Gardner-Harvey Library. Yes, we did already meet in November, but we skipped October; so, it all basically works out.

Here is a brief summary of the title, along with links to request the book from  OhioLINK, and SearchOhio libraries (Just click "Request" and choose "Miami University" from the dropdown list.  Then enter your UniqueID and password, and the library from which you would like to retrieve the item):  

"Broken Wheel, Iowa, has never seen anyone like Sara, who traveled all the way from Sweden just to meet her pen pal, Amy. When she arrives, however, she finds that Amy's funeral has just ended. Luckily, the townspeople are happy to look after their bewildered tourist--even if they don't understand her peculiar need for books."


Give it a read, or read something else interesting and come along to our discussion.  Share what else you've been reading/watching/listening to/experiencing, and help us plan our future readings.

Have an idea for a book to discuss?  Let us know and check out our page of past and future reads at http://www.mid.muohio.edu/library/bookdiscussion.htm

Wednesday, November 02, 2016

Learn to create a 3D object in 30 minutes at the TEC Lab!


Join us on Tuesday, November 15 OR Wednesday, November 16 and learn to create a 3D object with Tinkercad!  

From 3:00-4:00 on Tuesday or 12:00-1:00 on Wednesday, you'll have the chance to learn how to use a free, web-based tool to create anything you can imagine as a 3D object.  That object can then be printed or used in other software applications.

We'll spend 30 minutes getting you up and running in Tinkercad, and then you can stay for the remainder of the hour to work on your object.  You can even decide to have us print a copy in the color of your choice.  Make the investment of a little time to learn a skill you can use to create objects and content for modeling, prototyping, and just plain fun.

All are welcome to attend.  Please RSVP to burkejj@miamioh.edu with the day you plan to attend to reserve your spot (walk-ins are welcome if seats remain).  Come to Room 111 in the Gardner-Harvey Library for your opportunity to create a 3D object.

Remember,  if you attend two or more of our TEC Lab workshops and speaker events in Fall 2016, you will be entered in a drawing for a Kindle Fire tablet.

Who won a Colin at the Library in 2015/2016?

Yes, we're here on the red carpet at the Gardner-Harvey Library once again to award this year's Colins, the award given to the items most checked out from the library during the previous academic year.  The award is named after Colin Gardner, one of the two namesakes of the library (George Harvey is the other, but really, the Georges? That wouldn't work).

We added 1194 items to our collection last year, plus some reserve items that just circulate briefly.  Which of them were used the most?

Entrants in the awards had to be added to the collection from July 1, 2015 through June 30, 2016.  Here are some top ten lists in the following categories, along with the number of circulations per item:

Top ten textbooks

  1. Leadership (BTE 401) - 42 (and the winner of the Colin!)
  2. Public Speaking: An Audience-Centered Approach - 26
  3. Theatre: the Lively Art (THE 191) - 24
  4. Human Biology (BIO 161) - 23 (so close!)
  5. A Different Mirror: a History of Multicultural America (IDS 159) - 21
  6. Personal Finance (BTE 117) - 18
  7. Applied Fluid Mechanics (ENT 310) - 15
  8. Marketing: the Core (BTE 105) - 15
  9. What is Your Race?: The Census and Our Flawed Efforts to Classify Americans (IDS 159) - 12
  10. Ethics in a Computing Culture (CIT/CSE 262) - 12
Top ten fiction titles
  1. Go Set a Watchman, Harper Lee - 6  (and the winner of the Colin!)
  2. Uprooted, Naomi Novik - 5
  3. Seveneves, Neal Stephenson - 5
  4. The Alchemist, Paulo Coelho - 5
  5. Go Set a Watchman, Harper Lee (copy 2) - 4
  6. Winter, Marissa Meyer - 4
  7. Career of Evil, Robert Galbraith - 4
  8. The Nest, Cynthia D'Aprix Sweeney - 4
  9. Before the Fall, Noah Hawley - 4
  10. Circling the Sun, Paula McLain - 3
Top ten non-fiction titles
  1. The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, Marie Kondo - 8  (and the winner of the Colin!)
  2. The Official Guide for GMAT Review 2016 - 8
  3. The Official Guide for GMAT Quantitative Review, 2016 - 7
  4. CPT 2016 Professional Edition - 6
  5. Modern Romance, Aziz Ansari - 5
  6. Between the World and Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates - 5
  7. Rising Strong, Brenae Brown  - 5
  8. Furiously Happy, Jenny Lawson - 5
  9. Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future, Ashlee Vance - 4
  10. Arms and the Dudes: How Three Stoners from Miami Beach Became the Most Unlikely Gunrunners in History, Guy Lawson - 4
Top five juvenile books (many tied with one check out)
  1. What Pet Should I Get?, Dr. Seuss - 4  (and the winner of the Colin!)
  2. Your Voice Is All I Hear, Leah Scheier - 2
  3. The Story of Diva and Flea, Mo Willems - 2
  4. Be a Friend, Salina Yoon
  5. Freedom in Congo Square, Carole Boston Weatherford
Top ten DVDs
  1. Game of Thrones, Season 1 - 5  (and the winner of the Colin!)
  2. Penny Dreadful, Season 1 - 4
  3. Salam Neighbor - 3
  4. Citizen USA - 2
  5. 300 - 2
  6. Spider-Man (Tobey Macguire/Kristen Dunst) - 2
  7. The Room (Tommy Wiseau) - 2
  8. Do the Right Thing - 2
  9. School Daze - 2
  10. It Follows - 2
Top five pieces of equipment
  1. A close match among five iPad charging blocks and cables (26 checkouts was the highest)
And that ends the Colin Awards for 2016!  A big congratulations to our winners and to all the nominees!

How was the library used in 2015/16?

Here are the full annual stats from fiscal year 2016 (the 2015-16 academic year) for several of the Gardner-Harvey Library's (GHL) services. I hope you will find them useful to see how people use the library. 

These statistics reflect what happened between July 1, 2015 to June 30, 2016. Some stats we keep locally, others we pull from university-wide or OhioLINK-wide systems, and some are provided by database vendors.

On Average
Taking the statistics below and guesstimating a total Middletown community of 2000 students, faculty and staff members (and including community patrons), here's what can be said about the average person on campus. She:

- checks two items out from the library in a year (reserves and local/MU/OhioLINK collection items)
- visits the library 26 times per year
- downloads five full-text articles each year.
- accesses the library web site nine times per year.

- participates in a library instruction session or an embedded librarian course once per year (if she is a student).

Now on to the detailed analysis!

Both a Borrower and a Lender Be
- GHL patrons checked out 2,537 books and DVDs from us (1,089 from our local collection, 862 ordered from other MU libraries, and 586 items ordered from OhioLINK - that means that more than 55% of the items used by campus patrons came from libraries beyond GHL). That is a 14% decrease in borrowing from 2014-2015.  

- The GHL collection registered 3,115 checkouts (that's the 1,089 items checked out by Middletown patrons above, plus 1206 items sent to OhioLINK users, and 820 sent to other MU libraries - that means that 65% of the uses of our materials came from libraries beyond GHL). That is a 14% decrease in checkouts from 2014-2015. 

- GHL patrons checked out 2,324 reserve items from us (this includes faculty-placed course reservestextbooks on reserve, study rooms, laptops, iPads, and other equipment). That is a 2% decrease from 2014-2015. Textbooks on reserve checkouts more than doubled in 2015-16, with 685 checkouts vs. 325 in 2014-15.

- In terms of building up our collection, Middletown faculty, staff, and students ordered 1194 items to add to our collection this year. That is a 20% increase from 2014-2015.  

- We registered a total of 5,439 checkouts of items in our collection (reserves and circulating materials). The circulating items at GHL number 30,529, so each item in the collection circulated 0.18 times this year (all items in our library circulate). 

The Quest for Information
- Middletown patrons spent 14,371 search sessions downloading 11,228  full-text articles from Ebsco databases provided to us through Miami University and OhioLINK.  This only represents use of the databases on campus.  Those numbers reflect a 46% increase in search sessions and a 10% decrease in downloads from 2014-2015).

- On their way to these databases, 51 people visit our web site every day. That's a total of 18,772 visits for the year, by 8,352 unique individuals. That's a 19% increase in visits and a 24% increase in unique visitors from 2014-2015.

A Place for Work, Study, and Remove from the World
- GHL is open 57 hours per week.

- We averaged 225 visitors per day, for a total of 52,631 visits this year.  This reflects a 14% decrease from 2014-2015.  This may be due in part to our renovation, which closed off much of the library following finals week in May 2016, and moving around our seating areas as we cleared out the book stacks area ahead of the renovation in Winter Term 2016.

- We regularly schedule the library learning lab (GRD 111) for single class sessions. We also had 3 classes meet there weekly during fall semester and 3 met there during the spring.  We also made use of our study rooms with 5 classes meeting weekly during the fall in STAR Lounge 2.

- Our two STAR Lounges have been checked out 113 times this year by students.  That represents an 18% decrease from 2014-15.  They were also used weekly by librarians and other faculty and staff members for meetings. 

Helping You Find What You Need
- Inside and outside of the library, we gave library instruction presentations in 45 classes this year, reaching 773 students (a decrease of 28% from 2014-2015). The courses represented were from 14 different departments.

- Our Embedded Librarian program reached students from 72 course sections in their Canvas course sites during the academic year (that is a 10% decrease from 2014-2015). We helped over 1,503 students with their information needs through the program.

What don't we know about how the library is used?
- One key part missing from these figures is off-campus use of library resources: all off-campus use is tallied as MU-wide use, so we do not know how many Middletown patrons are using databases from home.  We have also lost meaningful data for on-campus use from some of our OhioLINK full-text resources.

- We don't have campus-specific stats for all database searches - we're missing uses of Lexis-Nexis and other databases.

- We hope you'll continue to let us know what you think about the library, what you need from us, and what materials we should order for the collection.

Thanks to everyone for making the library and its resources a vital part of your academic lives!