Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Taming the Wild Wild Web: Bing Health Maps

We get a lot of questions about statistics and although we do have resources that we pay for (such as Historical Statistics of the United States and Statistical Warehouse), sometimes our patrons want to a slightly different experience.

Bing Maps, Microsoft's map platform, offers a series of different map apps or overlays that enhances the content of the maps. At this writing, there are 59 different apps covering a variety of topics, such as restaurant suggestions, Japanese earthquake information, roadside attractions, and so forth. Bing Health Maps offers Health and Human Services data by county, with many popular statistics as obesity, infant mortality, and smoking rates.

Here's how you use it:

Go to http://bing.com/maps

Look for the itty bitty map apps button down in the lower left hand column:

You'll then get a pop-up box with the map apps listed. Bing Health Maps should be among the first you see:

Note the update date. The stats here are a little less than a year old, at least. Hopefully, the Bing Apps team will strive to update these numbers as they become available.

The map app takes a minute to load, and it should load (if geolocation is enabled in your browser), to your home state. Interestingly enough, it loads North Carolina if you are on Coker's campus, because the campus Internet service provider is based in the Rock Hill/Charlotte area.

You can pick which state, and the select which community health indicator you want to examine. The map is broken down by county, which is one unique feature that Bing Maps has over the more popular Google Maps.

Clicking on the county brings up a popup with all of the community health indicators listed, in three separate categories. As it stands now, there isn't an easy way to print the information or even compare counties (or states). But it does give you some important information easily, and it invites serendipitous knowledge discovery.

What other Bing Map Apps do you find interesting? Post in the comments below.

Monday, April 25, 2011

Picture of the Day

A green anole keeps a leery eye on the librarian with the camera.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Picture of the Day

Daniel Meyer (History major) positioned himself outside the Daniels Boardroom wearing a sandwich board sign to petition the Board of Trustees for higher admission standards. He was able to meet members of the BOT and share his thoughts.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

LITC BOOK REVIEW: Just Kids by Patti Smith

Reviewed by Donald Quist:

Just Kids is the National Book Award winning memoir by musician, writer, artist, Patti Smith. The book's main focus is to serve as an homage to Robert Mapplethorpe, her former friend and lover, and not to mention one of the most famed photographers of all time! This book has become one of my instant favorites. Smith’s narrative voice is so strong and the relationship between her and Mapplethorpe is so compelling, I forgive her redundancy and endless name dropping. She is a braggart, offering readers a glimpse behind the velvet curtain of the arts scene in 1970’s New York, and though that is somewhat the book's biggest appeal—the sense of voyeurism and exclusivity that sells tabloids—she is sincere. I found myself immediately drawn to her vulnerability, how her words read like a letter from a really close friend. If you strip away the cameos, her story is still meaningful and hopelessly romantic. There is a line in the book where Smith, speaking about Mapplethorpe’s work, says, “His obscenity was never obscene.” Her writing is very much the same. Smith approaches even the darkest aspects of her recollections, things like carcinoma, contracting the clap, head lice, intravenous drug use and dating two male prostitutes, with the frothy poeticism one would expect from a literary romance. But that is what it is, a story about two young people in love, with their art and each other, trying to craft an identity for themselves, walking in the shadows of giants and inevitably becoming giants themselves.

Share your thoughts on Just Kids, Friday, April 8th, 2011 @ 3:30pm, as the Coker College Library hosts a public book discussion with the Chair of the Art Department, Professor Jean Grosser in Room 228.

Monday, March 7, 2011

New E-book Collection!


Great news! We have added Springer E-books to our collection! By the end of this year, this collection will grow to over 25,000 books!

As always, e-books are a great resource that is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

An advantage to the Springer E-book collection is that we have unlimited access to each title that we own: all 1200 Coker students, staff, and faculty could technically have the same book open at the same time!

There are no restrictions for printing, as most titles are opened as PDF files. Also, these files can be loaded on any mobile device without any modification or compatibility issues.

For now, search the link on the E-books link on the library homepage. We will be adding the books to our online catalog later in the semester.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Spring Break Hours 2011




It's that time already! Spring break hours start this weekend:

We will be closed on Saturday and Sunday, March 5-6.
Monday-Thursday, March 7-10: 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Friday, March 12: 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Saturday, March 12: Closed
Sunday, March 13: 1 p.m. to 11 p.m.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

New Resources

We've got a few new products to announce: two new psychology databases and campus-wide access to newspaper.

Up first, we have the additions of PsycCRITIQUES and PsycEXTRA to our stable of behavior and social science databases. Both are companion databases to our larger PsycARTICLES and PsycINFO databases.

As per the vendor's website: "PsycCRITIQUES®, produced by the American Psychological Association (APA), is a database of full-text book reviews featuring current scholarly and professional books in psychology. It also publishes reviews from a psychological perspective of popular films and trade books. PsycCRITIQUES includes approximately 40,000 reviews dating back to 1956 and is indexed with controlled vocabulary from APA's Thesaurus of Psychological Index Terms®."

Film and popular culture classes might also find PsycCRITIQUES useful.

Next up, PsycEXTRA:

"PsycEXTRA®, produced by the American Psychological Association (APA), is a bibliographic and full-text companion to the scholarly PsycINFO® database. The document types included in PsycEXTRA consist of technical, annual and government reports, conference papers, newsletters, magazines, newspapers, consumer brochures and more.

This database complements PsycINFO and the other APA databases with extensive coverage of gray literature relating to psychology and the behavioral sciences; it contains around 200,000 records that are not indexed in any other APA database. Furthermore, content from the Archives of the History of American Psychology (AHAP) collection is expected to increase the number of records substantially. PsycEXTRA is indexed with controlled vocabulary from APA's Thesaurus of Psychological Index Terms®."

The addition of gray literature and conference proceedings will be highly useful for all levels of psychology research.

Finally, we are adding an online campus-wide subscription to The Chronicle of Higher Education.

From their website: "The Chronicle of Higher Education is the No. 1 source of news, information, and jobs for college and university faculty members and administrators.

Based in Washington, D.C., The Chronicle has more than 70 writers, editors, and international correspondents.

Online, The Chronicle is published every weekday and is the top destination for news, advice, and jobs for people in academe. The Chronicle's Web site features the complete contents of the latest issue; daily news and advice columns; thousands of current job listings; an archive of previously published content; vibrant discussion forums; and career-building tools such as online CV management, salary databases, and more."

We will continue our print subscription to The Chronicle.