Jane Bancroft Cook Library
The Jane Bancroft Library is a joint-use library shared by the University of South Florida Sarasota-Manatee and the New College of Florida. The library is currently located on the NCF campus along US 41 Tamiami Trail right next door to the Ringling Museum. In addition to serving USFSM and NCF, this facility also accommodates to the community by allowing modest borrowing privileges, Wi-Fi usage, and on-site access to databases and other electronic resources.
Type | Academic Library | ||||||
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Established | November 1, 1986 | ||||||
Location | Sarasota, Florida | ||||||
Collection | |||||||
Size | ~280,000 volumes | ||||||
Access and use | |||||||
Access requirements | University of South Florida Sarasota-Manatee and New College of Florida active faculty, students, and staff; community patrons (restricted access) | ||||||
Circulation | 30,000 annually | ||||||
Members | Tampa Bay Library Consortium (TBLC), Online computer Library Center (OCLC) | ||||||
Other information | |||||||
Director | Brian Doherty | ||||||
Website | https://www.ncf.edu/library/ | ||||||
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References: JBC Library History and Facts |
History
Library
Originally, the New College Library was maintained in College Hall, the mansion left over from Charles and Edith Ringling, and was converted in the mid 1960s from living space to learning space.[1] The acquisition of books was fairly quick and the collection grew to around 27,000 volumes within the first three years.[2] When the request was made to make the conversion, there wasn’t a perceived need even for a new library building, this however changed soon as space in the mansion was running out quickly for materials plus there was still a need for much more materials as well. In 1975 the school became part of the State University System allowing for many more sharing opportunities for the library and in the mid 1980s the colleges (USF and NCF) together with the New College Foundation with its many supporters managed to amass enough capital to construct a new library which would be shared with USF.[3] It received its name officially two years later as the Jane Bancroft Cook library and remains a shared library between the two institutions.[4]
Jane Bancroft Cook
Jane Bancroft Cook, sometimes mentioned as the Dow Jones heiress, was a prolific philanthropist giving to many campuses across the United States. She moved to Sarasota in the early 1950s and and as time progressed she found herself more and more involved with the town; Cook served on the Resource Center's Board of Directors for Sarasota County in the late 1980s and was even a trustee for the college and foundation.[5] The JBC Library holds tribute to her name and her contributions to the school overall.
Offerings
Areas
The Jane Bancroft Cook Library uses the Library of Congress Call Number system and holds its main circulating collection of physical books on the second floor, beginning in the far northwest corner with the Juvenile section. This proceeds to the DVD stacks coupled with alternative media such as audiobook cassettes and CDs, and VHS videos followed by musical CDs. The rest of the general collection then starts at A and wraps around the northeast corner, then heads south and wraps around the southeast corner where it stops at Z and the Oversized collection. In this area there are tables, soft furniture, and study carrels. Downstairs, where the lobby can be found, is where the Circulation Desk sits where reserves for classes may be located as well as non-book items may be borrowed. The large selection of physical periodicals is stored here too. Here also are the Faculty/Alumnus Authored and Writer in Residence displays, and on the far side of the periodical shelves, there is the Dr. Helen N. Fagin Collection for Holocaust Genocide Humanitarian Studies.
The library houses many other areas of specialized studies including the Writing Resource Center, the Qualitative Resource Center (these first two operated mostly by students), Educational Technology Services, Language Resource Center, Study Abroad, and the Center for Engagement and Opportunities.
Lastly, the JBC Library also has regular study rooms available to check out, many computer stations (PC and Mac) for active students, staff, and faculty of NCF and USF, a 'Collab' room for open group collaborations, a silent study a Workshop room available for appointments and a section displaying the Student Theses.[6]
Collection
The Collection stands around 280,000 volumes, 400 serial titles, has access through UBorrow to lend and borrow from all the institutions in the State University System and Illiad which allows borrowing and lending from institutions world-wide. USF is able to contribute, in addition to books of their own in the library's stacks, access to hundreds of Ebooks and databases ranging from dissertations to news articles and full-text academic journals.[4]
Users
The Jane Bancroft cook facilitates to active USF and NCF Students, Faculty, and Staff. Faculty receives a checkout length of one academic year, Students and staff receive an academic semester, and community members that have applied for and obtained a guest borrower pass are allowed three weeks with their loan. Media for all borrowers are allowed a week.[7]
References
- ↑ "An Opportunity To Convert The Charles Ringling Mansion Into The New College Library: A proposal and invitation to the James Foundation of New York". ncf.sobek.ufl.edu. Retrieved 2016-11-28.
- ↑ "Proposal to the Old Dominion Foundation: Expansion of the Library of New College, Sarasota, Florida". ncf.sobek.ufl.edu. Retrieved 2016-11-27.
- ↑ "ON THE OCCASION OF THE DEDICATION OF THE USF-NEW COLLEGE LIBRARY". ncf.sobek.ufl.edu. Retrieved 2016-11-27.
- 1 2 "Library History & Features - Jane Bancroft-Cook Library". sites.ncf.edu. Retrieved 2016-11-27.
- ↑ BINETTE, CHAD. "New College founder dies at 90". Sarasota Herald. Retrieved 2016-11-27.
- ↑ "Library Spaces and Events – Jane Bancroft Cook Library". www.ncf.edu. Retrieved 2016-11-28.
- ↑ "Circulation Policy and Procedures – Jane Bancroft Cook Library". www.ncf.edu. Retrieved 2016-11-28.