Hilton M. Briggs Library welcomes new faculty to South à£à£Ö±²¥Ðã State University! Librarians and staff are here to help you with your teaching and research needs.
Click the For Faculty link to learn about what the library has to offer you. The link will provide information on instruction services, the SDSU institutional repository , and much more. Don't forget to check out the ever-expanding Archives and Special Collections physical and digital materials, or the extensive collection. Below, we've highlighted some library resources and services that will be helpful as you get started in your role as a faculty member. Please contact us if you have any questions.
Accessing Library Resources Off-Campus
Access to library resources from off campus is easy! Link to the database or resource you need by starting from the library’s home page. Then, when prompted, enter your SDSU network credentials (the same login that you use for your university email or InsideState).
Additional services are available to all SDSU faculty, staff and students who cannot make regular (at least weekly) trips to the Brookings area. These include article and book delivery, off-campus instruction and remote research assistance.
Faculty who are delivering distance courses may be interested in our to resources for teaching online.
For help or more information, contact a librarian or the Library Services Desk at blref@sdstate.edu or 605-688-5107 or 800-786-2038.
Instruction
can help your students become familiar with library resources by offering online or in-person classroom instruction or providing your students individual consultations. Explore your opportunities for library instruction services.
Subject Librarians at Briggs
support your scholarship and teaching by:
- Collaborating on design of effective research assignments.
- Providing research instruction to students in your courses.
- Supporting students, in-person and online, with research assignments.
- Consulting on in-depth research questions.
- Participating in graduate and undergraduate student orientation activities.
- Facilitating access to library resources.
- Updating faculty about new services and resources.
Subject Librarians work with faculty on developing the library’s collections. We value your input on journal subscriptions and book purchases. Each department has a to coordinate purchases of library materials. You can forward to your department’s library representative who then decides what will be purchased with the funds available; or use the online , available on the For Faculty page. Book requests are sent to your department’s library representative for approval and journal recommendations are sent to your Subject Librarian for consideration.
Meet our subject librarians and areas of responsibility:
- for American Indian studies; Archives and Special Collections.
- for School of Design (architecture; interior design; landscape architecture; visual arts); English 101; Speech 101; School of Journalism and Communication; economics.
- for School of Health and Human Sciences; history, political science, philosophy and religion; School of Performing Arts (music, theatre and dance); Jerome J. Lohr College of Engineering; women, gender and sexuality studies; military science.
- for School of English and Interdisciplinary Studies; School of Psychology, Sociology and Rural Studies; School of American and Global Studies (modern languages and global studies); School of Education, Counseling and Human Development).
- for agricultural and biosystems engineering; agronomy, horticulture and plant science; à£à£Ö±²¥Ðã science; dairy and food science; natural resource management; veterinary and biomedical sciences; geography; physics.
- for nursing; pharmacy and allied health professions; chemistry; biology.
Textbooks
Briggs Library's e-textbook program has saved SDSU students over $519,623 since May 2020. When possible, the library will purchase unlimited use e-textbooks from participating publishers. Contact your for more information and to check if an e-textbook is available for your course.
Open Educational Resources
(OER) are teaching, learning and research resources that reside in the public domain or have been released under an intellectual property license that permits their free use and re-purposing by others. Some benefits of OER include an increase in retention; cost savings to students by replacing textbooks with free materials; and providing opportunities for creativity, collaboration and innovative teaching. Contact our systems and discovery librarian, Shari Theroux, with questions.
Read and Publish Agreements
are available from three publishers. These agreements allow SDSU faculty to publish as open access without paying the traditional publication fees.
Open PRAIRIE
is the SDSU institutional repository. It supports the collection, preservation and dissemination of SDSU’s scholarly and creative output from faculty, staff and students. Open PRAIRIE also allows for permanent storage of, and public access to, institutional materials. Thousands of SDSU documents have been downloaded from Open PRAIRIE more than a million times worldwide. For more information, contact Electronic Resources and Scholarly Communications Librarian Michael Biondo.
Interlibrary Loan and Document Delivery
If the library does not have access to what you need, books, scanned articles and other materials can be obtained through Interlibrary Loan (ILL) from other libraries in South à£à£Ö±²¥Ðã or beyond. Our document delivery service provides scans of articles/chapters available in print in the library. Submit requests from library databases or via the ILL link on our homepage. Contact ILL at 605-688-5573 or illsdsu@sdstate.edu.
Circulation
Check out materials, equipment, study rooms and more using your SDSU employee I.D. card. Faculty and staff may borrow circulating collection materials for one year, with a due date of Oct. 1. Bound periodicals are checked out for one week. See our guide for information about short-term check-out for items your students will need for course assignments.
Copyright
Copyright is a set of rights given to the creator of an original work fixed in a tangible medium. Explore our to learn about copyright compliance.
Scholarly Impact
As you begin to create your Faculty Annual Review (FAR), you can use the library's to find resources on altmetrics, journal impact factor and other measures of value for publications.
The Division of Research and Economic Development has resources related to finding and applying for grants. Librarians are happy to help with preliminary research as you prepare to apply for grants.