Thursday, September 27, 2018

Resetting EBSCO Folder Passwords


Having trouble logging into EBSCO Folders?

Beginning on October 1, 2018, EBSCO will require you to update your password once a year.

Resetting your password

  1. Log in to SuperSearch.
  2. Select Sign Into EBSCO Folders from the top menu on the right.
  3. Select Forgot Your Password?
  4. Enter your username and select Reset.
  5. Follow steps to reset your password.
  6. Go to SuperSearch to begin searching.
  7. Select Sign Into EBSCO Folders in the upper-right hand corner to save items to your folder.

Forgot your username?

If you have forgotten your username, we recommend trying your Saint Mary's username. Typically, students use their Saint Mary's username to create their account. If that does not work, please email us, and we will contact EBSCO on your behalf.

Thank you so much for your patience.

Email us anytime with questions or concerns. We’re happy to help!

Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Featured: The 2020 Workplace

The 2020 Workplace

How Innovative Companies Attract, Develop, and Keep Tomorrow's Employees Today

The future of the workplace is being molded by Web 2.0 technologies and new generations of employees, and employers must adapt if they want to survive and thrive.  In this book, human resources experts J. C. Meister and K. Willyerd provide a practical game plan that employers can use to attract and retain the best employees and achieve heights of innovation in the new future.

Recommended for: Anyone with an interest in supervision, management, or business development

Place a Hold

Tuesday, September 11, 2018

New Books: September 2018


What's new from the library?

This month's selection of new books includes the science of psychadelics, writing instruction in higher education, and grounded theory.  Plus, we've acquired brand new options in our fiction collection to entrance and entertain all types of leisure readers!
Here's what's new at the library this month:

NON-FICTION

FICTION

VIDEO 

  • Deej [DVD]
    • Abandoned by his birth parents and unable to speak for himself, DJ Savarese ("Deej") found not only a loving family but also a life in words, which he types on a text-to-voice synthesizer. As he dreams of college, he confronts the terrors of his past, society's obstacles to inclusion and often paralyzing beauty of his own senses.