Faculty Library Resources

 

Librarian Liaisons

  • Get Flex Credit for Consulting with a Faculty Librarian to learn how to incorporate library resources into your classroom to help students succeed.
  • Contact your library liaison to set up an appointment to learn about library resources available to you and your students.
Discipline/Subject Area Librarian Liaison
Accounting  Maryanne%20Mills%3A%20741-4661
Administration of Justice Jasmine%20Col%C3%B3n: 741-4682
Anthropology/Archaeology Yanghee Kim: 741-2484 (FA24:%20M.%20Mills, 741-4661)
Architecture Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
Art (Fine Arts) Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
Astronomy Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
Biology Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
Business Administration & Real Estate Maryanne%20Mills: 741-4661
Chemistry Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
Child Studies Yanghee Kim: 741-2484 (FA24: M.%20Mills 741-4661)
Communication Studies Jasmine%20Col%C3%B3n: 741-4682
Communication Design Jasmine%20Col%C3%B3n: 741-4682
Computer Science Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
Counseling Yanghee Kim: 741-2484 (FA24: M.%20Mills, 741-4661)
Court Reporting and Related Technologies Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
Dance Yanghee Kim: 741-2484 (FA24: B.%20Sandford, 741-2478)
Disability and Educational Support Program Maryanne%20Mills: 741-4661
Economics  Maryanne%20Mills, 741-4661
Engineering Jasmine%20Col%C3%B3n: 741-4682
English Jasmine%20Col%C3%B3n: 741-4682
English as a Second Language Jasmine%20Col%C3%B3n: 741-4682
Ethnic Studies Jasmine%20Col%C3%B3n: 741-4682
Fashion Design and Apparel Technology Jasmine%20Col%C3%B3n%3A 741-4682
Film Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
Geography Yanghee Kim: 741-2484 (FA24: M.%20Mills, 741-4661)
Geology Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
Health Care Technologies Yanghee Kim: 741-2484 (FA24: B.%20Sandford, 741-2478)
Health Education Yanghee Kim: 741-2484 (FA24:%20B.%20Sandford, 741-2478)
History – Latin American & Canada Jasmine%20Col%C3%B3n: 741-4682
History – US History Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
History – World History Maryanne%20Mills: 741-4661
Humanities Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
Interior Design Betsy%20Sandford%3A 741-2478
Kinesiology/Kinesiology Theory Yanghee Kim: 741-2484 (FA24: B.%20Sandford, 741-2478)
Mathematics Betsy%20Sandford%3A 741-2478
Music Yanghee Kim: 741-2484 (FA24: B.%20Sandford, 741-2478)
Nutrition Studies Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
Oceanography Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
Paralegal Yanghee Kim: 741-2484 (FA24:%20B.%20Sandford, 741-2478)
Park Management Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
Philosophy Betsy%20Sandford%3A 741-2478
Photography Betsy%20Sandford%3A 741-2478
Physical Science Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
Physics Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
Political Science Maryanne%20Mills: 741-4661
Psychology Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
Social Justice Studies Jasmine%20Col%C3%B3n: 741-4682
Social Science %20Maryanne%20Mills: 741-4661
Sociology Maryanne%20Mills: 741-4661
Theater Arts Betsy%20Sandford: 741-2478
Women and Gender Studies Jasmine%20Col%C3%B3n: 741-4682
World Languages Jasmine%20Col%C3%B3n: 741-4682

OER (Open Educational Resources)

Find OER for your class using several different tools, including content created by your WVC colleagues.

Library Orientations and Book Cart Visits

Library Orientations

A research instruction session can provide specialized instruction to help students:

  • Reduce library anxiety
  • Understand the research process
  • Locate books, articles and reputable websites
  • Recognize scholarly vs. popular articles
  • Utilize NoodleTools, a citation generator
  • Prepare for future research needs

To maximize the effectiveness of your research instruction session, please request sessions at least 1 week in advance. Assignments should be sent to maryanne.millsFREEWEST_VALLEY at least 3 days in advance.

Need help? Watch a short video about how to book a library orientation.

Book Cart Visit

The Book Cart is now available for the rest of the fall 2024 semester! Please contact Maryanne%20Mills if you would like a classroom visit.

A Books á la Carte Class visit session can provide research specific to your classroom to help your students:

  • Reduce library anxiety.
  • Ask a librarian quick reference questions outside of the library.
  • Select handouts created by librarians on citing and evaluating various source types.

Please prepare for the following:

  • Sessions must be requested at least 1 week in advance.
  • Instructors must attend the book cart session with the class.
  • Remind students they will need their WVC Student ID or any form of government issued picture ID. Knowing Student ID without picture ID will not be permitted to checkout books.
  • Read the West Valley College Library Policies.
  • Consider ways to encourage your students to check out materials from the book cart.

The book cart visit is weather permitting. If rain or a chance of rain is in the forecast, Maryanne Mills will contact you the day prior to reschedule.

Adding Database Content To Canvas

Steps to Access TEACH Resources for Canvas

  • Navigate to the "TEACH Resources for Canvas" course.
  • Go to the module "Use Library Resources in Canvas" to find instructions on how to embed videos.
  • If you don't have access to the TEACH Resources page, select the  "Join this Course" button.

 

Screenshot of Canvas module

Course Reserves

The objective of the Library Reserve collection is to support the curriculum and contribute to student success by making course materials available (on a limited basis) to students.

The reserve collection of print materials is located at the Book Checkout Desk and that of non-print materials is located at the Print/Copy Desk.

General Guidelines

  • Instructors are encouraged to donate or loan course textbooks to augment the limited selection purchased through the Reserve Book Program. Please contact Library staff to see if a specific course textbook is included in the Program.
  • To place an item on reserve, please fill out the Course Reserve form.
  • For those materials not owned by the Library, it is the instructor's responsibility to provide all material to be placed on reserve.
  • All reprinted articles and audiovisual materials must comply with current copyright laws and include a full bibliographic citation as to the source.
  • The Library reserves the right to limit the number of copies being placed on reserve for a given class.
  • If only one copy of an item is being submitted, only one loan period may be designated.
  • Materials borrowed from other libraries, including Mission College, may not be placed on reserve.
  • Materials for reserve will be processed in the order received. Please allow three days processing time before materials are available to students.
  • The Library is not responsible for replacement of damaged or lost personal copies.
  • The Library reserves the right to remove materials that have little or no activity.
  • All withdrawn instructor-owned materials must be picked up at the Book Checkout or Print/Copy Desk.
  • Current Library circulation fines and fees apply to all reserve materials.
  • Please call us if you have any questions: 408-741-2028.

Loan Periods (during COVID-19)

  • 2 hour (reserve item to be used within library)
  • 1 day (due back the next day the library is open)

 

Library Resource Purchase Request

The West Valley College Library welcomes suggestions to add to our collection of books, media, and other resources that will help our students succeed and learn.

Please fill out the Library Resource Purchase Request form and let us know what you resources you would like your students to have free access to.

You will be contacted by a librarian letting you know if the source will be purchased and when it will be in the catalog ready for use.

Faculty, Administration, and Staff Publications

West Valley College Library is proud to highlight the publications of our faculty, administration, and staff! Copies of printed publications may be retained in the West Valley College Online Library Catalog. Links to electronic full-text or publisher are provided with the citations when available. To submit your publication, fill out the Faculty, Administration, and Staff Publications/Scholarship form.

Business

Teresa Thompson

English Department

Paulette Boudreaux

Dulce Gray

  • "Examining the Labels that Mark my Ethnic Identity." Essay in The Leaning Ivory Tower: Latino Professors in American Universities, edited by Raymond V. Padilla and Rodolfo Chávez Chávez. SUNY Press, 1995. 91-100. Print. (Published under last name Cruz).
  • High Literacy and Ethnic Identity: Dominican American Schooling in Transition. Boulder, Colorado: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., November 2001. Print.
  • "Mapping the Use of Feature Films in Composition Classes." Essay in Cinema-(to)-Graphy: Film and Writing in Contemporary Composition Courses, edited by Ellen Bishop. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann Books, 1999. 100-115. Print. (Published under last name Cruz). Full-text available online
  • Meanderings on the Making of a Diasporic Hybrid Identity. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, Inc., December 2012. Print. Book available at WVC Library.
  • "One Night on Moses Mountain." Travel Narrative in A Woman's World Again, edited by Marybeth Bond. CA: Traveler's Tales, 2007. Print. 
  • "Recordando las enseñanzas de mi abuelita." Essay in Abuelas hispanas: desde la memoria y el recuerdo, edited by Marina Llorente and Ilia Casanova-Marengo. Madrid, Spain: Ediciones Torremozas, May 2012. Print. Full-text available online.
    "Teaching Spidertown in the Blended Classroom" in Multiethnic American Literatures: Essays for Teaching Context and Culture, edited by Helane Adams Androne. Jefferson, NC: MacFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, 2014. Print. Full-text available online.
  • "Two Easy Ways to Practice Global Citizenship in the College Classroom." Essay in special issue, "Going Global: Contemporary International Voices and Visions," of North Dakota Quarterly 78.2 & 3 (2013): 57-62. Print. Link to article.
  • "You Take Twirled Bodies and Turn Them into Two." Story in No Regrets: It's Time to Move On. Ed Pamela Gifford. San Bernadino, CA: Silly Tree Anthology, 2014. 65-71. Print. Full-text available online.
  • "Using Silence to Promote Spiritual Growth in the Teaching of Composition and Literature." Article in Teaching with Joy: Ideas for the New Millennium, edited by Sharon Shelton-Colangelo and Mimi Duvall. Colorado: Rowman & Littlefield, Inc., 2006. Print. Book available at WVC Library.

Nils Michals

Christina Stevenson

  • Stevenson, Christina L. (2015) "The Lesbian and the Room: Proust's Invention of Difference," Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature: Vol. 39: Iss. 1, Article 3. https://doi.org/10.4148/2334-4415.1816. Link to article.
  • Stevenson, Christina. "Here Was One Room, There Another": The Room, Authorship, and Feminine Desire in A Room of One's Own and Mrs. Dalloway." Pacific Coast Philology, vol. 49 no. 1, 2014, p. 112-132. Project MUSE muse.jhu.edu/article/542640. Link to article.

Math Department

Rebecca Wong

  • Gould, R., Ryan, C., Wong, R. (2017). Essential Statistics: Exploring the World through Data. Boston: Pearson.

Reading/ESL Department

Michelle Andersen Francis

  • Francis, M. A., & Simpson, M. L. (2003). Using theory, our intuitions, and a research study to enhance our students' vocabulary knowledge. Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy, 47(1), p. 66-78.
  • Francis, M. A., & Simpson, M. L. (2018). Vocabulary. In R. Flippo & T. Bean (Eds.) Handbook of college reading and study strategy research (3rd Ed). Routledge.
  • Simpson, M. L., Stahl, N. A., & Francis, M. A. (2004). Reading and learning strategies: Recommendations for the 21st Century. Journal of Developmental Education, 28(2), 2-15, 32.
  • Simpson, M. L., Stahl, N. A., & Francis, M. A. (2012). Reprint of reading and learning strategies: Recommendations for the Twenty-First Century. In R. Hodges, M. L. Simpson, & Stahl, N. A. (Eds.) Teaching Study Strategies in Developmental Education: Readings on Theory, Research, and Best Practice. Boston, MA: Bedford/ St. Martin's.
Last Updated 11/12/24