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E-reserves

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Blackboard - Course Reserves for Faculty - Research Guides at University of Denver. Home - Course Reserves. Project Documents- Ejournal articles - E-stuff. A nightmare scenario for higher education. In anticipation of the trial starting on Monday in the copyright infringement case brought against Georgia State University by Cambridge, Oxford and Sage publishers, and partially financed by the Copyright Clearance Center, there has been a flurry of motions, mostly relating to the admission of various pieces of evidence.

But amongst that deluge of paper is a truly frightening document, the proposed injunction that the plaintiffs are requesting if they win the case. I have always known that there was a lot a stake for higher education in this case, but the injunction the publishers want would be a nightmare scenario beyond even my most pessimistic imaginings. First, if this injunction were adopted as proposed, it would enjoin everyone at Georgia State, including students, who would seem to largely lose their fair use rights by virtue of enrolling at GSU. It would apply to e-reserves, faculty web pages and any learning management systems in use or adopted in the future.

Using Reserves - Student FAQ. Electronic Reserves provide online 24 hour access to your course readings. These readings are made available electronically at the request of your instructor. E-reserves access is restricted to students enrolled in a specific course. Your NetID and password will give you access to E-Reserves for a course in which you are enrolled.

E-reserves access is granted based upon enrollment in the course associated with the reading you are trying to access. You can find all of the reserve readings for your classes in the UT Arlington Library Catalog Look at the Course Reserves tab and search using your instructor's name, last name first. There are several possibilities. If the reading is there, but there isn’t an “E-Items” link, your instructor may have asked us to place it on “On-site” reserves only (i.e. not online)E-Reserves materials are listed by the title of the article or book chapter along with the article/book author information. No. Most reserve materials must remain in the library. No.