This paper describes efforts at the University of Arizona Libraries (UAL) in Tucson to improve access to the Internet and technology during the COVID-19 pandemic and as the libraries continue to adapt to hybrid instructional modalities. The authors highlight how their institution leveraged campus data and new partnerships to better meet students’ basic technology needs, particularly for first-generation and underrepresented students. While much of this content was previously presented at the 2022 Library Assessment Conference,1 there have been several updates, and more operational information is shared in this article. UAL analyzed anonymized student demographic data, including race and ethnicity, first-generation student status, and Pell g...
In Fall 2018 the Oregon Institute of Technology Klamath Falls Campus Library began a pilot project t...
A memo to UNI faculty on how to help students deal with technology and limited bandwidth
This research examined the essential online library services that college students used and found us...
This paper describes efforts at the University of Arizona Libraries to improve access to internet an...
Student success in higher education depends on access to digital resources and services, and today's...
The incorporation of technology into libraries has become an increasingly important matter as techno...
This paper describes how the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library provided access to c...
This article begins by looking at changes in the student body in recent years as useful indicators o...
Undergraduates, as members of the Millennial Generation, are proficient in Web 2.0 technology a...
According to this study of students at Warner Pacific College, mobile device penetration is at nearl...
In this extended abstract, an ongoing pilot study looking at technology assistance in the Urbana Fr...
Research libraries in U.S. have continued looking for new ways to use library spaces to support the ...
The presentation seeks to examine academic librarians’ support of information technology’s applicati...
This paper will address the ways in which academic librarians can work to bridge the communication g...
The sudden global epidemiological outbreak in early spring 2020 challenged the academic libraries’ A...
In Fall 2018 the Oregon Institute of Technology Klamath Falls Campus Library began a pilot project t...
A memo to UNI faculty on how to help students deal with technology and limited bandwidth
This research examined the essential online library services that college students used and found us...
This paper describes efforts at the University of Arizona Libraries to improve access to internet an...
Student success in higher education depends on access to digital resources and services, and today's...
The incorporation of technology into libraries has become an increasingly important matter as techno...
This paper describes how the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library provided access to c...
This article begins by looking at changes in the student body in recent years as useful indicators o...
Undergraduates, as members of the Millennial Generation, are proficient in Web 2.0 technology a...
According to this study of students at Warner Pacific College, mobile device penetration is at nearl...
In this extended abstract, an ongoing pilot study looking at technology assistance in the Urbana Fr...
Research libraries in U.S. have continued looking for new ways to use library spaces to support the ...
The presentation seeks to examine academic librarians’ support of information technology’s applicati...
This paper will address the ways in which academic librarians can work to bridge the communication g...
The sudden global epidemiological outbreak in early spring 2020 challenged the academic libraries’ A...
In Fall 2018 the Oregon Institute of Technology Klamath Falls Campus Library began a pilot project t...
A memo to UNI faculty on how to help students deal with technology and limited bandwidth
This research examined the essential online library services that college students used and found us...