If you need assistance organizing, analyzing, or visualizing data sets, please visit the Empirical Reasoning Center (ERC). ![]() |
Zotero is a free, easy-to-use tool to help you collect, organize, cite, annotate, and share research. It helps you track all your sources and build bibliographies in minutes! It's also collaborative, so if you're working on a project with multiple people you can all save your sources in one place!
Zotero 7 was just released with a new logo.
Check out Zotero's extensive documentation to see how it works!
Barnard and Columbia University students, faculty, and staff now have full access to NYTimes.com through Columbia University Libraries.
As a Barnard student you can sign up for New York Public Library (NYPL) card! They're free!
The NYPL has more than 6 million items circulating, including books, e-books, audiobooks, music, and movies. Thank you to our friends at the George Bruce branch for working with us to make on-campus card signups happen! The NYPL has 92 locations in Manhattan, the Bronx, and Staten Island. The closest branches to Barnard are the Morningside Heights and George Bruce branches.
CLIO is the online catalog to Columbia University Libraries (including Barnard), but excluding Teacher's College and the Law Library who maintain their own catalogs. CLIO contains over 7 million records for books, online resources, journals & newspapers, conference proceedings, sound recordings & scores, videos, archival collections & oral history transcripts, online databases, maps & images, and more!
CLIO is the library catalog for the Columbia Library System (including Barnard Library, but excluding Teachers College). In CLIO you can find books and media materials, search for different kinds of databases, and find articles within those databases as well.
What is CLIO? from IMATS @ Barnard on Vimeo.
You can search for newspaper collections from around the world by selecting "Databases" from the navigation list on the left, and then "Newspapers" in "Browse by Resource Type." Make sure you don' have any search terms in the search box when you begin. You can limit newspapers by language, region, or era in the left navigation to narrow your search. You can also follow the link to the Database Search here.
The Barnard Media Collection includes CDs, DVDs, and VHS tapes. All media items are located in the Barnard Library, and can be found on the 2nd floor (see map for exact location). The Library has four media viewing stations on the south side of the Milstein Center second floor (see floorplan) - these are both able to play VHS and DVD.
To request purchase of a video for the permanent collection, please use the Request for Library Materials form
Butler Media circulating and non-circulating research film collections support Columbia University instruction and research. All titles in the collection are cataloged in CLIO. Request and pick up films at the Butler Circulation & Reserves desk on the 3rd floor.
Collection consists of popular feature films and documentaries on DVD format.
Circulate to current faculty, students, and staff with valid borrowing privileges (Columbia University, Barnard College, Teacher's College, and Union Theological Seminary). For loan policies, see this page.
CLIO Location: Butler Media, Circulating (208 Butler Library)
Collection consists of U.S. and foreign feature films, early cinema, avant-garde cinema, video art, and a wide range of documentary film content on DVD, VHS, and LaserDisc formats.
In-library use only for students and staff.
May be placed on course reserve by faculty/instructors or borrowed for class screenings.
DVDs are located in Butler Media Services behind the Reserves Desk, 208 Butler Library. VHS tapes, LaserDiscs, and 16mm films are located in our offsite storage facility in Princeton, New Jersey. Use the "Request from Offsite" link located on the film's CLIO record to request a title on VHS, LaserDisc, or 16mm format.
CLIO Locations:
Columbia's Gabe M. Wiener Music & Arts Library has a collection of over 20,000 sound and video recordings that Barnard students, faculty and staff have access to. Look for CLIO location "Music Sound Recordings."
Academic databases work most effectively when using AND, OR, and NOT or including "quotation marks" or asterisks * in your searching. The videos below do a wonderful job unpacking how these tools work.
Catalog search tips:
Keywords are terms that describe the topic you are researching. Keywords can be a people, places, things, ideas, or concepts. We need keywords to effectively search in library academic databases (like CLIO or Jstor). Unlike internet browsers, which have developed to understand full questions written in natural language, academic databases use keywords to locate resources.
There are no perfect searches when using keywords, which is why it's useful to brainstorm lots of related terms and/or synonyms to locate what you are looking for. For example, we might use the word "teenager" to describe a particular population, but the term "youth" might be used in a database instead. You can also find new keywords once you begin searching in the content section and subject sections of a catalog entry.
Barnard has access to many current news sources through CLIO. You can locate these by searching the news source's title in CLIO under E-Journal Titles. However, the user experience is somewhat different than a digital subscription, and for that reason, Columbia offers a few titles in digital subscription form as well. In each case, you must use your Columbia email (uni@columbia.edu) to subscribe.
Artstor offers more than one million digital images in the arts, architecture, humanities, and sciences with a suite of tools for doing research. Images in Artstor are high-quality images for download, with complete descriptive information related to the image itself, and the object(s) depicted.
Advanced Search: Allows you to search by architect, image creator, and project, and further limits your search by location, classification (architecture, decorative arts, drawing, etc.), by date, or search within institutional collections like Columbia University Image Bank, or all of Artstor.
Results: You can further refine your search results in the result page.
Image View: Offers you all the the rights information you need to make a full citation, and also offers other important information you might not find elsewhere. You can also download high resolution images directly from this page.