About the University Library

About the Collections

The University Library holds more than ten million volumes and 22 million items and materials in all formats, languages, and subjects, including 9 million microforms, 90,000 serials, 148,000 audio-recordings, 12,000 films, and 650,000 maps. These collections form the bulk of I-Share, the statewide library online catalog. Currently there are 65 I-Share libraries and more than 30 million library items represented in the I-Share catalog. Users at these I-Share libraries may borrow books directly from the 65 I-Share library participants.

Among the Library's most notable collections are its holdings in Slavic and Eastern European history, literature, and science; music, especially Renaissance music; 17th- and 18th-century American and British literature; American, British and Irish history, including a distinguished collection of Lincolniana; French, German, and Italian literature, including world-famous Proust, Rilke, Dante, and Tasso collections; Latin American history and literature; historic and modern maps; linguistics; entomology, ornithology, botany, chemistry and mathematics; and serials across all disciplines.

The Library is also world-famous for its outstanding collection of emblem books and incunabula; and collections, including personal papers, of John Milton, Marcel Proust, H.G. Wells, Carl Sandburg, and Avery Brundage of the international Olympic movement.

Accessibility

The goal of the University Library is to become the nation's leading institution in terms of physical and electronic access to its collections. The Library is already well-known for allowing anyone--not just the university community--to use its collection on-site. Now more than a million patrons from around the world also log on weekly to search the Library’s online catalog through a variety of networks, including the Internet. The Library's worldwide patrons also know that if they call the Library with a reference question, they will receive the same outstanding professional help that on-site users receive.

The University Library now has embarked on a new mission to remove the barriers of time and place from access to Library materials. In conjunction with the university's National Center for Supercomputing Applications, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, and its own Grainger Engineering Library Information Center as the test-bed laboratory, the Library is actively working on advanced, networked, multimedia information systems. It will be introducing sophisticated new bibliographic software and navigational tools that will make using our catalogs as easy as 'point-and-click.' Users anywhere in the world already can access the Library's online catalog and many of its databases via the Internet through direct telnet, Gopher menu, or World Wide Web. As new software tools emerge from the Library's cooperative efforts, this kind of 24-hour access will be enhanced to include full-text retrieval and integration of illustrations and sound with the text.

Library Service to Undergraduates

The Library's Undergraduate Library, with over 200,000 volumes, provides in one location more reference resources for undergraduate instruction than any other undergraduate college library in the United States. The Undergraduate Library is also known nationally for its array of award-winning programs designed to teach students to become sophisticated users of the latest information technologies. These courses are integrated into a student's regular classroom instruction so that virtually every student is assured of exposure to bibliographic instruction. Many of the Library's other departmental libraries also conduct bibliographic instruction programs tailored to the specific needs of individual courses.

The Undergraduate Library also offers other important services, including a formal term paper research counseling program; the Career Cluster collection, which includes help on interview and resume-writing skills; and the Writer's Workshop, which helps students develop their formal writing skills. As a further service to undergraduates, the Undergraduate Library and Grainger Engineering Library Information Center both have campus-supported multimedia computer laboratories, with more than 20 workstations each.

History

Library Deans/University Librarians