Understanding publication versions and which you can share with ScholarWorks
Your work has been accepted for publication! Congratulations!
Your work has been accepted for publication! Congratulations!
Candice Benjes-Small, head of research and librarian to Kinesiology and Health Sciences, spoke to Assistant Professor Iyabo Obasanjo about her recently published article, “A Case Study of a Community Health Worker Program Located in Low-Income Housing in Richmond Virginia.”
Grab the peanut butter to your jelly, the peas in your pod, your birds of a feather, because Trivia at Swem is back for the semester! This month, we’re all about friends, frenemies, and other perfect pairings. Register today!
Join us on February 18 for an open house to learn more about the Music Library and Reeder Media Center equipment and services. There will also be a live improvisatory performance by artist and W&M faculty member, Victor Haskins. Snacks and drinks provided!
Instruction & Research Librarian Camille Andrews spoke to Dr. Joel S. Levine about his published book, "The Impact of Lunar Dust on Human Exploration."
Strollin’, a new exhibit on view in the Marshall Gallery (1st floor rotunda in Swem Library), brings together belongings from members of Black Greek-letter organizations (BLGOs) at William & Mary.
Announcement, annoucement, annooooouuuucement! Or Extra Extra Hear All About It! (depending on your persuasion and generational tendency).
"Strollin': A History of Black Greek Letter Organizations at William & Mary" opens February 1 in Swem Library. There will be a reception at 6 p.m. in the Botetourt Gallery, followed by a book talk by Gregory Parks, professor of law at Wake Forest University and author of A Pledge with Purpose: Black Sororities and Fraternities and the Fight for Equality.
W&M Libraries is again participating in Short Edition’s Long Story Short Inter-University Writing Contest, and you can help us win another short story dispenser! Submit your short stories, poems, and creative nonfiction for a chance to win cash prizes and be published worldwide in Short Edition’s 350+ dispensers. Deadline February 21, 2022
Textbook costs continue to rise, and you can be a part of the solution by incorporating low-cost and no-cost materials into your courses with Open Educational Resources (OER).