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Every year when the library's NYT subscription renews, you will need to update your account information in order to continue accessing the NYT. Follow the steps below to renew your account. If you don't already have an account, see our blog post on creating a new account.

1.    Navigate to accessnyt.com
2.    Search for and select Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. You will be redirected to the NYT registration page.
3.    Use your existing NYT account to login. You must use your @mcla.edu email address.
4.    Verify your account.
5.    If you are using the NYT app on your phone or other device, you may need to log out and log back in.

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06/07/2021
profile-icon Emily Alling

The Worcester State University Library is the newest member of the Higher Education Libraries of Massachusetts (HELM) consortium, joining MCLA and eleven Massachusetts community colleges who share an online catalog and lend directly to one another's borrowers.

MCLA patrons can now request print items from Worcester State's collection (along with items from the collections of the other HELM libraries) directly via the library catalog

While MCLA values all of our HELM partner institutions, we are especially excited to have another four-year institution on board. Welcome to HELM, Worcester State!

 

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The library is pleased to offer new and enhanced databases, including thousands of full-text journals, from EBSCO starting this semester.  

Two of our most popular databases, Academic Search Premier and Business Source Premier, have been upgraded.   

In addition to those upgrades, MCLA now has access to two brand new databases.  

All library databases can be found on our website under Databases A-Z.  

Access to this new content was negotiated by MCCLPHEI, a statewide consortium of public higher education libraries, and comes at no additional cost to MCLA. We hope that you find these resources useful in your work. Questions? Feedback? Please contact the library

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For the latest updates about MCLA campus operations, please visit the college's Coronavirus (COVID-19) Information page. 

Thanksgiving and beyond: With the move back to remote teaching, learning, and work this Thanksgiving, the library will once again move to virtual operations on Wednesday, November 25, with curbside pickup of library materials still available.

Visit Library to Go to get started using the library's virtual collections and services.

Questions? Please call 413-662-5321 or email library@mcla.edu

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Freel Library believes unequivocally that Black lives matter. We add our voices to those condemning the continued shooting and killing of Black individuals by police and mourning the lives shattered and lost: Ahmaud Arbery, George Floyd, David McAtee, Breonna Taylor, Jacob Blake, and too many others.  

The library also acknowledges the insidious effects of the racism that pervades the daily lives of people of color in the United States. It is incumbent upon those who do not live with it every day to learn to recognize and name racism in its many forms and work to undo it. Books are a start, but they are not a substitute for difficult conversations and concrete action. Being nice is a start, but politeness does not necessarily imply understanding or true inclusivity. 

We will work continuously toward creating an antiracist library that is worthy of MCLA's diverse and dynamic community. Steps in this direction include: 

  • Seeking out, listening to, and inviting accountability from students, staff, and faculty of color; incorporating what we learn into library services, collections, facilities, and policies  

  • Empowering our community to understand and work toward identifying and dismantling systemic racism and personal biases by providing information and encouraging dialogue (Our Anti-Racist Resources Guide is a beginning) 

  • Using our role as selectors and disseminators of information, literature, and scholarship to amplify BIPOC voices 

  • Including Black-owned businesses among the vendors from whom we purchase books 

  • Being intentional about recruiting and hiring more people of color to work in the library 

We hope that you will share your thoughts, experiences, and questions with us. Use our general library contact information, or reach out directly to Associate Dean for Library Services, Emily Alling

In solidarity, 

The staff of Freel Library 

Alishia Alther
Danielle Christensen
Emily Alling
Glenn Lawson
Kate Flower
Laura Dear

Pamela Contakos

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The library is pleased to be able to provide access to premium content on the Chronicle of Higher Education to all MCLA faculty, staff, and students. 

You can read premium content in one of two ways:

  1. Create an account on the Chronicle site using your mcla.edu email address, and make sure to be logged in to that account when you visit chronicle.com; OR
  2. Use the following link, which will prompt you to log in with your A number and password: https://libproxy.mcla.edu/login?url=https://www.chronicle.com/

Please let the library know if you have any trouble accessing the subscription.

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Libraries bring people together. And, heading into this strange new normal, we will continue to do so. 

Right now, though, bringing people together in person is just not in the community’s best interest. 

It feels counterintuitive, and it makes us as sad as it makes you. Seeing you every day is the best part of our jobs, and we already look forward to the day you can return. 

Until then, we won't be able to welcome you to Freel Library for in-person visits.  

But: We are still here for you!  

  • Library staff remain available Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m via phone (413-662-5321) and email (library@mcla.edu).  

  • Beginning on Monday, March 30, librarians will also be available from 5 p.m. - midnight Sunday through Wednesday via our Ask Us service, where we can answer questions via chat, email, phone, or text.  

  • You can also set up a one-on-one appointment with a librarian via Skype, where we can share screens and have the next best thing to an in-person interaction.  

  • Our helpful FAQ is available 24/7, and we’ll be adding to it in the days to come. 

Our Library to Go page is a quick introduction to library collections you can use from off campus, including: 

...and more! The full library website will lead you to even more resources.  

You can hold on to your MCLA library books and DVDs: we are suspending overdue notices and will not bill for items during this time.  

We hope you’ll follow us on InstagramFacebook, and Twitter, where we’ll continue to build community around information. 

Many of us feel uncertain, frightened, and overwhelmed right now. But, if we all reach out for help when we need it and support each other however we can, we know the MCLA community will get through this together.

  

 

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Everyone with an mcla.edu email address is now eligible to sign up for a free subscription to the New York Times digital edition (website and/or mobile app)! Just follow these simple directions: 
 
  1. Navigate to accessnyt.com
  2. Search for and select Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. You will be redirected to the NYT registration page. 
  3. Click "Create Account" and complete the form. You must use your @mcla.edu email address​.
  4. Verify your account.

You will receive a confirmation email (check your spam folder if you don't see it within a couple of minutes). You must click the link in this email to complete the registration.

 

MCLA's digital subscription includes most nyt.com content, with a few exceptions. 
  • Most games are not included.
  • E-reader (Kindle, Nook, etc.) editions are not included.
  • Access to some of the archive (1923-1980) may be limited. (The library does have most of those years on microfilm, which, if you haven't used it before, is a real treat.)
  • Your MCLA New York Times account no longer works with the NYT Food app -- this is now a separate, paid subscription. 
 
The NYT in Education website (faculty focused site that includes 16 discipline-specific areas of study, discussion prompts, learning outcomes, Instructional Strategies, and Co-Curricular Activities)  is a separate website and requires its own username/password.  You must register for access (and use your @mcla.edu email address) here: 

nytimesineducation.com/register

We hope that you find this subscription useful! If you experience any issues while activating or using your subscription, please contact the library.

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