Posts Tagged ‘Penrose Library’

Penrose Library Dean Allen talks about the Academic Commons

Wednesday, May 30th, 2012

The new Academic Commons at Penrose Library will debut in early 2013. Nancy Allen, dean and director of the library since 1992, looks ahead to the big day.

Q: Why is the new library called an academic commons?

A: The name was chosen because the building will be home to an array of high-traffic student- and faculty-support services anchored by the library. These support services are not only located in the library, but are deeply collaborative in meaningful ways. Just two examples: The library’s Research Center and the Writing Program’s Writing Center both help students move through the continuum from inquiry to expression involved in writing one of the more than 6,000 papers produced each year by DU students. And the library works closely with the Office of Teaching and Learning to help faculty provide digital content in their courses in ways that enhance learning.Nancy Allen, Dean and Director, Penrose Library

Q: What has you most excited about the new Academic Commons?

A: We simply cannot wait to see how students respond to the building. New library buildings at other institutions have more than doubled the number of students using the space. We expect increased visits by students coming for help with academic projects, to meet and work with classmates on assignments, to find that perfect quiet location for individual reflection, or to go to an academic event. Everything students and faculty will do in the new building will support learning outcomes.

Q: Will lovers of the traditional library—of book stacks and quiet spaces—feel at home in the new building?

A: Absolutely! We will provide two new “deep quiet” study rooms and more quiet study seats throughout the space. Handcrafted study carrels and sophisticated color palettes will help students find the focus and concentration they need. We will have a large book collection available for browsing—nearly 40,000 linear feet of the most-used books will be housed on the lower level. That’s almost 7.5 miles of books to support browsing, with another 70,000 linear feet of other types of publications, including journals, government documents and archives, available for speedy delivery upon request.

Q: In re-envisioning the library, what was the biggest challenge confronting you and your staff?

A: We need to support current scholarly and research practices while building a dynamic and flexible infrastructure for the future through good technology choices, appropriate furniture and a combination of group and individual study rooms. The contemporary library supports use of both digital and tangible resources, and that balancing of past, present and future is quite a challenge.

Q: Many of us are fond of Penrose’s modern furnishings. Will the new building incorporate any of our old favorites?

A: The midcentury modern design will be visible in the new furniture plan, which is based on re-use of over 4,000 furniture and office items. In addition, we plan to purchase and build many new pieces to create a beautiful and comfortable environment.

Interview by Tamara Chapman          Photo by Wayne Armstrong

National Library Week

Friday, April 6th, 2012

It’s National Library Week, April 8 – 14, 2012, and that feels a bit strange here at DU.  One may look at the Academic Commons construction zone and assume that the University of Denver doesn’t even have a library.   How can a worthy academic institution exist without a library?!  Chester Alter, DU’s Chancellor from 1953 until 1967, was known to say, “A great university must have at its heart a great library.”  So where does that leave DU, given that our library looks like this?

At DU, we’re excited and delighted about the Academic Commons, and looking forward to the transformational impact we expect it to have on the DU student experience.  Research suggests that patron visits will nearly double, so the bricks and mortar are important to all who use the new building.  The facility itself will have people flocking to enjoy the state of the art, shiny, new space.  There will be so many structural enticements in the new building including huge windows, a café and porch, an atrium, group study spaces, absolute deep quiet study spaces, fireplaces, an event center, the latest technology, and abundant exhibit space to show off the treasures from our collections.  But in the meantime, Penrose remains proud and functional as a library, even without a central home.

The faculty and staff of Penrose created a miracle of sorts last spring, when they removed every single thing from the 1972 Penrose Library building, yet continued to offer uninterrupted service.  Currently, the 17 faculty, 60 staff and 101 student employees of Penrose Library provide all of the services, resources and materials that were offered at the original Penrose Library building, and now we do it from four separate buildings.   Penrose is the largest campus employer of students, and in our temporary quarters in the Driscoll Student Center, Penrose is open 24 hours a day, 5 days a week, and slightly fewer hours on weekends.  Technology allows patrons to use all of Penrose Library’s digital resources including over 600 databases, at any time of day or night from any remote location via internet access to library.du.edu.

All of this leads to the point that even without a library building, the University of Denver’s Penrose Library is at its heart the people who provide important programs and services, and who facilitate use of the vast resources of a fine academic library one expects of a great university.  In the Academic Commons, staff and services will increase to include more of the important and heavily-used academic support services that are integral to student success.  We have much to celebrate during National Library Week, and so much to look forward to in the Academic Commons, when the people, programs and resources at the heart of Penrose Library are all together in an amazing new building.

Click here to see a video of how Penrose currently retrieves books for patrons during the Academic Commons building project.

Click here to read Jeff Rundles’s recent column about librarians and customer care where he says, “…libraries and librarians ….  must be the most helpful, the most informed, and the most knowledgeable resources on the planet.”

Perched for a Lifetime of Learning

Friday, March 30th, 2012

If you were to walk inside the construction zone in the Academic Commons building project, you would see the “perched classroom” taking shape.   When completed, this research instruction and meeting space will appear to float in the atrium, and DU students and faculty will conduct important work here.  Visible from the main and upper floors of the Academic Commons, this dramatic room with a curved wall of windows invites observation of the research instruction taking place inside, while facing out to the vast resources of Penrose Library.

Perched classroom in the Academic Commons

Thanks to the internet, those of us with access are blessed with information.  But sometimes the amount of information can be overwhelming, a burden.  To those who think someday librarians won’t be necessary because of the internet, we’d like to point out it is precisely because of the surfeit of information that librarians are vital.  No one manages to digest all of the information available, so we need librarians to help us make sense of it all.

At Penrose, our reference librarians work closely with DU faculty and students.  Each major academic division has its own Penrose faculty librarian specializing in that discipline, responsible for teaching research skills relevant to that field of study.  Faculty may request for their students a library workshop that emphasizes the integration of research skills into course topics.  Librarians tailor sessions to the group (for example, first year writing students or graduate students in art history) by drawing on appropriate databases from the more than 600 available through Penrose.

Whether we say this is all about critical thinking, research skills, or the contemporary term “information literacy,” Penrose librarians teach every student how to be an expert information manager.   As the American Library Association says, “Information literate people are those who have learned how to learn. They know how to learn because they know how knowledge is organized, how to find information, and how to use information in such a way that others can learn from them. They are people prepared for lifelong learning, because they can always find the information needed for any task or decision at hand.

In the perched classroom of the Academic Commons at Penrose Library, equipped with projectors, and state of the art teaching technology such as video walls, this library teaching and learning space is appropriately positioned high in the center of the building, since student success starts with the ability to find, use, manage, and apply documentation of current and past generations of scholars and writers.  Librarians will bring thousands of DU students into this space every year, exposing them to the light streaming from the surrounding windows, and to the brilliance of knowledge discovery.  In 2010-2011 in the original Penrose Library facility, 5,080 DU students participated in research workshops. We expect many more to engage in such programs at the Academic Commons.

The reference librarians at Penrose Library also offer many different instructional workshops, guides, and tutorials to help the DU community learn about library research.   Click here for the current Penrose Library instruction schedule.