This guide is intended for students who are using the library online to help guide the experience and make the library website easier to understand and use!
Refining the Open Library Catalogue: My Internship StoryThis link opens in a new windowBy Jordan Frederick AKA Tauriel063 (she/her), Canada When deciding where to complete my internship for my Master’s in Library and Information Science (MLIS) degree, Open Library was an obvious choice. Not only have I been volunteering as an Open Librarian since September 2022, but I have also used the library myself. I wanted to work […]Mar 21, 2025
API Search.json Performance TuningThis link opens in a new windowThis is a technical post regarding a breaking change for developers whose applications depend on the /search.json endpoint that is scheduled to be deployed on January 21st, 2025. Description: This change reduces the default fields returned by /search.json to a more restrictive and performant set that we believe will meet most clients’ metadata needs and […]Jan 16, 2025
U.S. Copyright Office Invites Public to Webinar on Effectively Using the Copyright Public Records SystemThis link opens in a new window
U.S. Copyright Office Invites Public to Webinar on Effectively Using the Copyright Public Records System
NewsNet 1069 April 09, 2025
Have you used the Copyright Public Records System (CPRS) pilot to power your copyright public records searches? Now is the time to try, ahead of the summer 2025 decommissioning of the legacy system that supports the existing Copyright Office Online Public Catalog. CPRS will become the sole source of authoritative online copyright information on registrations and recordations by the end of June 2025.
Whether you’re a novice or an experienced user, the U.S. Copyright Office invites you to register for the upcoming webinar, How to Effectively Use the Copyright Public Records System, on May 8, 2025, at 2:00 p.m. eastern time. This sixty-minute webinar will highlight CPRS’s modern interface and features that can help users locate copyright public records successfully. Participants will walk away knowing how to use CPRS’s simple and advanced search capabilities, which include flexible formatting; dynamic filters; and the ability to download, email, and share records. There will be an opportunity for questions and answers. CPRS is the second component to be made publicly available as part of the Office’s new Enterprise Copyright System (ECS).
Time: May 8, 2025, 2:00 p.m. eastern time; register to attend
Speakers:
Denise Wofford, Assistant Register and Director, Office of Copyright Records, U.S. Copyright Office
Shawn Gallagher, Management and Program Analyst, Office of Copyright Records, U.S. Copyright Office
Robin Coreas, Program Analyst, Office of Copyright Records, U.S. Copyright Office
Since the December 2020 release of the CPRS pilot, the Office, in partnership with the Library of Congress, has continuously improved CPRS’s search capabilities and interfaces in response to public feedback. CPRS not only includes recordation and registration information, as in the existing Public Catalog, but also now includes searchable metadata for over 3.5 million registration applications from 1909 to 1945.
The Office encourages you to access the CPRS pilot at publicrecords.copyright.gov and provide feedback on your experience using the feedback link at the bottom of the page.
To receive notifications about future Copyright Office events, subscribe to our email updates.
Apr 9, 2025
U.S. Copyright Office Publishes Final Rule to Require Pay.gov Use for Statutory Royalty PaymentsThis link opens in a new window
U.S. Copyright Office Publishes Final Rule to Require Pay.gov Use for Statutory Royalty Payments
NewsNet 1068March 31, 2025
The U.S. Copyright Office has published a final rule amending its regulations regarding the submission of royalty fees by cable, satellite, and digital audio recording devices or media (DART) operators to require that these fees be paid using Pay.gov.
This amendment simplifies the royalty payment process as part of broader efforts to make Office services digitized, interconnected, searchable, and easier to navigate.
View Pay.gov tutorials to become more familiar with the process.
Mar 31, 2025
Henry Rowe Schoolcraft papers, 1788-1941 [Revised Finding Aid: Digitized Content Added]This link opens in a new windowHenry Rowe Schoolcraft, author, ethnologist, explorer, geologist, glass manufacturer, and Indian agent; his first wife, Jane Johnston Schoolcraft, the Ojibwe author Bamewawagezhikaquay, which translates in English as "Woman of the Sound the Stars Make Rushing Through the Sky"; and his second wife, Mary Howard Schoolcraft. Correspondence, journals, articles, books, manuscripts of magazines, poetry, speeches, government reports, American Indian vocabularies, maps, drawings, and other papers reflecting Schoolcraft's career as a glass manufacturer, mineralogist on an exploring expedition in the Ozark Mountains, geologist on the Cass expedition to the Northwest Territory, leader of expeditions throughout the Great Lakes region, member of Michigan's legislative council, Indian agent, superintendent of Indian affairs for Michigan, ethnologist, and author of works concerning the Iroquois in New York state and other Native American groups.Nov 20, 2024
We are Institute of Technology Library & LRCs but you can call us IOT LLRC for short.
The Main Campus Library located in Clovis California was established in 2008 with 800 titles and 15 Magazine Subscriptions
Our collection now includes 15,663 physical items as well as more than 15 research databases with access to millions of journal articles, e-books, and streaming videos
The current Library Division was established in 2009 and rolled out from 2010-2014 to Modesto, Redding and Salem as each campus was purchased.
We are located in Main Building A-25, A-26 and in the Culinary Building K-8.
Inside you'll find three rooms with 25 student computer stations, one copier, one printer, office supplies, 2 study tables, 33 bookcases housing the print collection, Free Lending Library,
Not on campus? We are still here to help, with virtual resources and services including online research assistance, chatting, and texting