30 · Survey Results: Survey Questions and Responses
Comments N=18
Open to all interested attendees
Again, we offer both.
Both actually apply, depending on group targeted.
Both, depending on the workshop. Some are drop-in on a topic of interest to a general audience. Others are for a
specific course.
Health Sciences Library notes that workshops are open to all, except when a workshop is developed/tailored to a
specific medical audience.
The answer is actually both, for different purposes.
The answer is actually both. We offer training to both general audiences and specific groups. We have some general
workshops on citation management that are open to general audiences other times topics are customized to be
included in specific course-related instruction or RCR-specific training. The only consistent RCR-specific training we offer
is for the required RCR training for art history graduate students.
The plagiarism sessions are required of all students.
The workshops for most workshops given by the University Libraries are open to all interested students however those
given by the Law Library are limited to specific groups.
Unless invited by a specific group!
We offer both open sessions and sessions limited to specific groups.
We’ve tried to tailor it to specific groups but lately the attendance has been low (for students that is), therefore we make
it an open, drop-in set up.
Limited to specific groups
Any RCR training is part of more general bibliographic instruction and would be limited to class.
I.e., the class for whom the session was prepared.
The RCR workshops offered through the graduate school are intended for PhD candidates, but they are open to others
attending as space is available.
We offer workshops to graduate students in partnership with the Office of Graduate Studies. Faculty are welcome to
attend and have shown up to our workshops.
While the workshops were originally intended to be open to all interested attendees, their branding as graduate
workshops limited attendance to a specific group. Thus, is 2013, the Libraries has re-branded the workshops as
Research Workshops and begun to promote them to all attendees.
Additional Comments
Both, depending on the workshop.
Sometimes open sometimes specific.
Comments N=18
Open to all interested attendees
Again, we offer both.
Both actually apply, depending on group targeted.
Both, depending on the workshop. Some are drop-in on a topic of interest to a general audience. Others are for a
specific course.
Health Sciences Library notes that workshops are open to all, except when a workshop is developed/tailored to a
specific medical audience.
The answer is actually both, for different purposes.
The answer is actually both. We offer training to both general audiences and specific groups. We have some general
workshops on citation management that are open to general audiences other times topics are customized to be
included in specific course-related instruction or RCR-specific training. The only consistent RCR-specific training we offer
is for the required RCR training for art history graduate students.
The plagiarism sessions are required of all students.
The workshops for most workshops given by the University Libraries are open to all interested students however those
given by the Law Library are limited to specific groups.
Unless invited by a specific group!
We offer both open sessions and sessions limited to specific groups.
We’ve tried to tailor it to specific groups but lately the attendance has been low (for students that is), therefore we make
it an open, drop-in set up.
Limited to specific groups
Any RCR training is part of more general bibliographic instruction and would be limited to class.
I.e., the class for whom the session was prepared.
The RCR workshops offered through the graduate school are intended for PhD candidates, but they are open to others
attending as space is available.
We offer workshops to graduate students in partnership with the Office of Graduate Studies. Faculty are welcome to
attend and have shown up to our workshops.
While the workshops were originally intended to be open to all interested attendees, their branding as graduate
workshops limited attendance to a specific group. Thus, is 2013, the Libraries has re-branded the workshops as
Research Workshops and begun to promote them to all attendees.
Additional Comments
Both, depending on the workshop.
Sometimes open sometimes specific.