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news.library.ualberta.ca
  • BLOG HOME
  • About
    • Author Profiles
    • Five Things You Need to Know About the Library
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    Reduce Exam Anxiety with Classical Music

    by Guest Author April 12, 2018
    written by Guest Author

    Written by Carolyn Carpan

    A symphony orchestra performing in a concert hall
    Photo by Manuel Nägeli on Unsplash

    Research shows that listening to calming music while studying helps people relax and perform better during exams. To help you get through a stressful exam period, you can listen to music online from the University of Alberta Libraries’ collections.

    Naxos Music Library is the world´s largest source for online classical music. It also offers streaming access to more than 136,000 CDs with more than 2 million tracks from many popular composers and genres of music including jazz, blues, ballet, contemporary instrumental, and orchestral music, as well as relaxing nature sounds. You can also find music from favorite composers like Bach, Mozart, and Handel in Music Online: Classical Music Library. You can search for music by time period, genre, and instruments.

    If you want to stream live and recorded classical music concerts featuring music from composers such as Brahms and Strauss, you have access to hundreds of recordings in Digital Concert Hall from the Berliner Philharmoniker. Medici.tv also provides you with streaming videos of classical music concerts, ballets, and operas from concert halls and stages all around the world.  

    Stay relaxed and good luck with your exams!

    April 12, 2018 0 comment
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  • Making History Come Alive: New Primary Source Research Resources

    by Guest Author March 19, 2018
    by Guest Author March 19, 2018

    Written by Carolyn Carpan Do you need primary research materials for your history classes about World War I, World War II, or the Vietnam War? Make history come alive with new online collections from University of Alberta Libraries. History Vault provides a treasure trove of digitized letters, papers, photographs, scrapbooks, financial records, and diaries so you will get a sense of what it was like for people working and living through military…

  • Have a Heart Day for First Nations Children

    by Guest Author February 8, 2018
    by Guest Author February 8, 2018

    “Reconciliation is all of us.” ~ First Nations Child & Family Caring Society Will you have a heart for First Nations youth? This is what Sarah Auger, a doctoral student in Indigenous Peoples Education: Educational Policy Studies, asked library staff. And so, you can come to the H.T. Coutts Library to extend your hearts with us. From February 10-16, you can get more facts about inequities faced by First Nations youth in…

  • Making Sense of Immigration and Migration Around the World

    by Guest Author January 19, 2018
    by Guest Author January 19, 2018

    Written by Carolyn Carpan With U.S. President Trump’s recent comments that labeled certain nations as “sh**hole countries” and the recent news regarding a U.S. crackdown on immigration, the Libraries’ want to share a database called Border and Migration Studies Online that helps researchers delve into the complexity of human migration. You can learn the historical background on more than thirty worldwide border areas, including:   The United States Mexico The European Union…

  • Making Meaning Through Metadata: Are We Being Culturally Appropriate?

    by Guest Author January 9, 2018
    by Guest Author January 9, 2018

    Written by Tanya Ball As a part of our commitment to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC)’s Calls to Action, UAL has formed the Decolonizing Description Working Group (DDWG) who have been working tirelessly on our library catalogue and metadata. Metadata… that’s a scary word, isn’t it? It doesn’t have to be! Metadata is just the fancy word for describing all of this: It’s information about a material within the library. This…

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