-
- All Amicus Training courses
- Afternoon Tea with....department overviews of Amicus
- Amicus 1-2-1 Training
- Amicus Learning Week
- Amicus Learning Week - for Colleges
- Amicus New Starters
- Amicus Online Courses
- Amicus Webinar
- Amicus Workshops
- Amicus rollout programme Sept-Oct 2017
- Amicus training for Colleges (non-migrated users)
- CUDAR Learning and Professional Development
- Team Training sessions
-
- All Cambridge Digital Humanities courses
- CDH Basics
- CDH Guided Project
- CDH Methods Fellow Workshop Series
- CDH Methods Workshop
- CDH Reactor
- Digital Humanities Introduction
- Digital Humanities Workshop
- Digital Media in Practice
- Ethics of Big Data
- Machine Reading the Archive
- The Library as Data
- Ways of Machine Seeing
-
Cambridge University Libraries
- All Cambridge University Libraries courses
- Bespoke Courses for Institutions
- Biological Sciences Research Skills
- Biological Sciences Study Skills
- CUL Research Skills
- HASS Research Skills
- Know Moore About (Physical Sciences Research Skills)
- MSt Research Skills Development
- Medicine
- Music
- Orientation
- Research Skills
- STEMM Research Skills
- Special Collections
- Subject Resources
- Theology
- Virtual Study Rooms
-
Cambridge University Library Staff Learning & Development
- All Cambridge University Library Staff Learning & Development courses
- ALMA
- Academic Publishing
- All Staff Briefings
- Apprenticeships
- Business Improvement
- Cataloging
- Change
- Collection Care
- Customer Service
- Digital Preservation
- Digital Preservation
- First Day Welcome
- GDPR for Librarians
- Governance for Library Staff and Managers
- Health and Safety
- Induction and Orientation
- International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF) Workshops
- Leadership Development
- Libraries in Training : Management
- Managing Finance
- Managing Staff
- Philanthropy
- Project Management
- Reader Services Workshop
- Recruitment and Selection Skills
- Staff Review and Development
- Strategic Priorities Project
- Team Events
- Time Management
-
- All Department of Chemistry courses
- Advanced Organic Chemistry
- Biological Chemistry
- Careers Programme
- Catalysis
- Characterisation Techniques
- Chemistry Staff Programme
- Contemporary Chemistry
- Drug Discovery
- Foundation Skills
- GLS Compulsory Elements
- Hot Topics
- Induction
- Information Systems
- Machine Learning
- Novel Materials and Microdroplets
- RIG Seminars
- ST2 Introduction to Machine Learning & AI
- Safety
- Showcase Week
- Statistics for Chemists
- SynTech CDT
- Undergraduate Library Services
-
- All Department of Engineering courses
- Applications and interviews
- Academic Integrity and Ethics (Technology Libraries Team)
- Collaboration and teamwork
- Creation and communication
- Creative thinking and problem-solving
- Critical assessment
- Designing Conference Posters (Technology Libraries Team)
- Ethical and legal requirements
- Finding What Your Need (Technology Libraries Team)
- Finding funding and opportunities
- Foreign and programming languages
- Information management and ICT
- Leadership and mentoring
- Library
- Library open programme
- MPhil - ESD
- MPhil - Energy Tech and Nuclear Energy
- MPhil - ISMM
- MPhil - MLMI
- Managing Your Data (Technology Libraries Team)
- Managing Your Online Profile (Technology Libraries Team)
- Managing information
- Proactive planning and networking
- Publishing in Journals (Technology Libraries Team)
- RDC A
- RDC B
- RDC C
- RDC D
- RDC E
- RDC F
- Referencing (Technology Libraries Team)
- Research methods and techniques
- Resource discovery
- Self-leadership and resilience
- Teaching and supervision
- Time Smart (Technology Libraries Team)
- Time and project management
- Undergraduate
- Writing and presenting with impact
-
Department of Materials Science and Metallurgy - Health & Safety
-
Development and Alumni Relations - Staff Learning & Development
-
- All Equality & Diversity courses
- Archive Black History Month
- Archive Different Views
- Archive Holocaust Memorial Day Programme
- Archive International Women’s Day Programme
- Archive Other Equality and Diversity Events
- Archive pre ay 2016 - 2017
- E & D Online Training
- Engagement - Athena Swan
- Engagement - Disability
- Engagement - Gender
- Engagement - LGBT
- Engagement - Other
- Engagement - Race
- Implicit/Unconscious Bias Training
- Staff Network Events
- Training - Implicit Bias
- Training - LGBT
- Training - Race Awareness
- Training - Respect at Work
- Wellbeing - FoW
- Wellbeing - MHAW
- Wellbeing - WellCAM
-
Health, Safety and Regulated Facilities
- All Health, Safety and Regulated Facilities courses
- Biological Safety
- Buildings and Construction
- Chemical Safety
- DSE use and assessment
- Face Fit Testing
- Fire Safety
- First Aid
- Health
- Laboratory Safety
- Managing Safety
- Manual Handling
- Online training
- Personal Safety
- Radiation
- Risk Assessment, Policy and Inspection
- Safety Management
- Safety Officers & Administrators
- Toolbox Talks
- Virtual training
- Working at Height
- Workplace
- Workshop Safety
-
Institute of Continuing Education Staff Learning & Development
-
- All JISC Digital Skills courses
- Data Literacy - JISC
- Digital Collaboration - JISC
- Digital Communication - JISC
- Digital Creation - JISC
- Digital Identity Management - JISC
- Digital Innovation - JISC
- Digital Learning - JISC
- Digital Participation - JISC
- Digital Productivity - JISC
- Digital Proficiency - JISC
- Digital Research and Problem Solving - JISC
- Digital Teaching - JISC
- Digital Wellbeing - JISC
- Information Literacy - JISC
- Media Literacy - JISC
-
Office of Scholarly Communication
- All Office of Scholarly Communication courses
- Academic Publishing
- Librarian as Researcher
- Open Access
- Open Data
- Open Research
- Repositories
- Research Communications
- Research Data Management
- Research Funder Policy
- Research Impact
- Research Management
- Research Metrics
- Researcher Online Presence
- Supporting Researchers in the 21st Century
-
PPD Personal and Professional Development
- All PPD Personal and Professional Development courses
- Communication
- Develop Your Career
- Digital Capability (JISC)
- Innovation and New Ways of Working
- Leadership and Management
- Legal and Compliance
- New Staff
- Personal Effectiveness
- Productivity
- Recruitment and Selection
- Valuing Everyone and Dignity at Work
-
- All Technology Libraries courses
- Academic Integrity and Ethics
- Creation and Communication
- Critical Assessment
- EPSRC CDT students
- Engineering RDC
- MPhil - Energy Tech and Nuclear Energy
- MPhil - Engineering for Sustainable Development
- MPhil - ISMM
- Managing information
- Open to All
- Resource discovery
- Undergraduate
-
University Information Services - Digital Literacy Skills
- All University Information Services - Digital Literacy Skills courses
- Accessibility & Assistive Technology
- Artificial Intelligence
- Bespoke Courses for Institutions
- Bibliographic Software
- Bitesize
- Cisco Networking Academy
- Cloud Computing
- Collaboration & Communication
- Data Analysis & Reporting
- Databases
- Design and Desktop Publishing
- Documentation & Wordprocessing
- Google Applications
- Graphics and Photos
- HR Systems
- Hardware
- High Performance Computing
- IT Certification Courses
- Internet of Things
- Introductory IT Courses
- JISC Digital Communication, Collaboration and Participation
- JISC Digital Creation, Problem Solving and Innovation
- JISC Digital Identity and Wellbeing
- JISC Digital Learning and Self Development
- JISC Digital Proficiency
- JISC Information, Media and Data Literacy
- Macintosh System & Use
- Multimedia
- Music
- Networking
- Office 365
- Preparation for Certification
- Presentations
- Programming and Scripting
- Project Management
- Research
- Scientific Computing
- Security
- Spreadsheets
- Statistical and Mathematical Software
- Techlinks & IT Support Staff
- UIS Systems
- University Training Booking System
- Unix (including Linux) Systems & Use
- Version Control
- Videoconferencing
- Web Browsing & Searching
- Web Publishing & Management
- Windows Systems & Use
-
University Information Services - Staff Learning & Development
All Cambridge University Libraries courses
Showing courses 76-100 of 226
Courses per page: 10 | 25 | 50 | 100
In this intensive clinic session, we cover the big take away points from our focused sessions on designing an effective and impactful conference poster. Work with an experienced librarian in getting started with key tools as well as having the opportunity to discuss design choices, options, and get some feedback on your work so far.
In this intensive clinic session, we cover the big take away points from our focused sessions on managing your online presence as a researcher. Work with an experienced librarian in getting started with key tools such as ORCID as well as discussing the pros and cons of certain platforms such as Twitter in more detail.
In this intensive clinic session, we cover the big take away points from our focused sessions on using the reference manager tool Zotero. Work with an experienced librarian in getting started with the tool as well as troubleshooting common problems.
In this intensive clinic session, we cover the big take away points from our focused sessions on navigating the broad and sometimes complex topic of copyright in the context of your research. Work with an experienced librarian to answer any questions you may have around reusing other people's work, licensing your work for reuse, and working out how to submit your thesis or even publish, all while keeping on the right side of copyright law.
Do you have what it takes to beat the UL? Assemble a team to take on the challenge!
A self-led Library induction with a difference! Solve a series of puzzles which will lead you all over the UL, while teaching yourself to navigate the building and our physical collections. Have fun, learn how to use the UL and you will receive a small prize on completion!
Teams of up to 6 players can participate - if you want to play with your friends you'll need to make sure you all sign up to the same session. All players must be registered users of the University Library.
Please note this is a self-led, treasure hunt style induction. We recommend signing up in a group of at least 3 people. Traditional orientation tours are also available here: traditional orientation tour
Do you have what it takes to beat the UL? Assemble a team to take on the challenge!
A self-led Library induction with a difference! Solve a series of puzzles which will lead you all over the UL, while teaching yourself to navigate the building and our physical collections. Have fun, learn how to use the UL and you will receive a small prize on completion!
Teams of up to 6 players can participate - if you want to play with your friends you'll need to make sure you all sign up to the same session. All players must be registered users of the University Library.
Want to make it even more interesting? Let our staff know on the day if you would like to be timed for a chance to top our Beat the UL leaderboard! You can complete the challenge as many times as you like, but only your first attempt will be timed!
An introduction to the use of the specialist Theology and Religious studies bibliographic database ATLA for undergraduates, providing information on how to make the most effective use of this resource; of particular relevance to those preparing or working on a dissertation and wanting to acquire wider bibliographic information on a specific topic.
An introduction to the many resources available through the University Library's Chinese department.
This session aims to address the following:
- How to define and refine your research question
- Building up your search skills
- Learning what databases to use and when
- Getting Google to work for you
- Evaluating your sources
- Referencing what you find
This course is based on a typical literature review lifecycle. You start by planning your search. You then carry out your search. Once you've found some results, you evaluate what you have found to see if it is relevant to your needs. You manage your results by saving them to a suitable place so you can come back to them. If you are interested in tracking changes in your field, you enact approaches to keep up to date with new research. And as your research evolves, you refine your search to reflect new concepts and new terms. And so the cycle continues.
While you may not be as focused on the longer term tracking of new research in your field, being able to plan, search, evaluate and manage effectively are additional skills which we will cover in this course. The course will be structured around the first four stages described above, with optional additional information about the last two stages for those who are interested.
This course is supplemented by live workshop opportunities throughout the academic year.
The Internet has been available since the early 1990s and has been a repository for almost all human thought. It is, however, a highly ephemeral resource with websites in regular change and frequent deletion. A web archive attempts to capture, preserve, and give access to archived websites at regular intervals. This session will introduce web archives and their potential for academic research at all levels.
An opportunity to visit the main University Library (UL) with other LLM students. The tour will include an overview of the UL's law collections, a visit to the Rare Books Room and information about searching for Official Publications and historical material.
Welcome to the Squire Law Library! This introductory tour is led by the Librarian, David Wills, and Enquiry Desk staff member, Lizz Edwards-Waller. The tour will include information about borrowing, copying and scanning material, a visit to the dedicated PhD work areas within the library, an overview of the library catalogue and an introduction to the extensive law collections available to you.
A thirty minute introduction to the UL, aimed at those using our facilities and collections over the summer vacation period. An experienced member of staff will meet you in the Entrance Hall then lead you on a twenty minute tour of the UL,taking in the Locker Room, Open Bookstacks, Reading Room and West Room. Ten minutes are reserved after the tour for a question and answer session.
Do you have what it takes to beat the UL? Assemble a team to take on the challenge!
A self-led Library induction with a difference! Solve a series of puzzles which will lead you all over the UL, while teaching yourself to navigate the building and our physical collections. It's the most fun you'll ever have on a library induction!
Teams of up to 6 players can participate - if you want to play with your colleagues you'll need to make sure you all sign up to the same session.
Let's make it interesting! Let our staff know on the day if you would like to be timed for a chance to top our Beat the UL staff leaderboard! A little friendly competition can't hurt...
This course is based on a typical literature review lifecycle. You start by planning your search. You then carrying out your search. Once you've found some results, you evaluate what you have found to see if it is relevant to your needs. You manage your results by saving them to a suitable place so you can come back to them. If you are interested in tracking changes in your field, you enact approaches to keep up to date with new research. And as your research evolves, you refine your search to reflect new concepts and new terms. And so the cycle continues.
While you may not be as focused on the longer term tracking of new research in your field, being able to plan, search, evaluate and manage effectively are key skills which we will cover in this course. The course will be structured around these first four stages, with optional additional information about the last two stages for those who are interested.
This session equips participants with all the fundamental skills that they need to build and execute effective search strategies to locate and critically evaluate relevant materials for literature reviews, projects and other related research activities. The structure of the session will move through the processes of basic keyword generation, constructing search strings, understanding which resources to search, developing critical evaluation skills to assess quality and relevance of found items, as well as some tips on how to keep up-to-date with new research developments.
This session is tailored to those researching and studying within the Department of Psychology and will demonstrate specific resources such as PsycInfo.
This session will be delivered using Zoom so please ensure you have it installed ahead of the session. A joining link will be sent out as part of the booking confirmation process.
If you require any help before the session, such as accessibility support, please email the Deputy Librarian for Biological Sciences, George Cronin (gmp36@cam.ac.uk), for further assistance.
This session focuses on finding literature in the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences. The session will help you build a list of literature for your research topic (sometimes referred to as secondary literature) by introducing key resources for finding materials, illustrating a range of techniques for searching, and discussing how to stay up to date with research in your field.
By the end of this session, you should be able to: • Plan a strategy for finding literature on your research topic. • Discover a range of resources available for your literature search. • Make the most of the resources available using a range of techniques and tools. • Stay up to date with research in your field. • Build a list of relevant literature related to your research topic.
If you are a STEMM researcher, you may find our Literature Searching for Researchers (STEMM) course useful https://www.training.cam.ac.uk/cul/course/cul-rs-search-stemm
Other related courses in our Research Skills programme include Managing your References with Zotero and Managing your Research with Endnote. The Engaging with your literature: critical reading and managing literature-based research (Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences) course from the Researcher Development team may also be useful.
This session equips participants with foundational skills that they need to build and execute effective search strategies to locate relevant materials for literature reviews, projects, and other related research activities. The session will explore key searching techniques, where to search, and how to troubleshoot common searching problems, as well as keeping up to date with the latest research.
This session discusses the benefits and challenges of maintaining an online presence as a researcher. Starting with exploring what comes up through a quick Google search all the way through to maintaining profiles on academic sites, this session will look at the pros and cons of online engagement. Popular platforms such as Twitter and YouTube will be discussed, as will tools such as ORCID, and networking sites such as academia.edu and ResearchGate.
Participants should expect to have the opportunity to critically evaluate the various options presented in this session with the overall aim of being better informed when deciding where to invest their time and efforts when building an academic presence online.
This session will introduce you to Zotero (https://www.zotero.org/), a free tool to manage bibliographies and bibliographic databases.
Using a reference manager is one of the best ways to look after crucial research literature, whether planning for a literature review or simply keeping track of developments in a particular discipline. This session will introduce Zotero.
Using live demonstrations, discussions, and troubleshooting common referencing issues, the session will give an in-depth look at how Zotero (and tools like it) can help maximise a research project workflow while also ensuring that critical resources and information are not lost at any point in the research process.
Please note: This session will be offered, either online or in person, in Michaelmas, Lent and Easter terms.
Managing your data well is a key responsibility as a researchers and it prevents disasters. You will encounter research data in many forms, ranging from measurements, numbers and images to documents and publications.
Whether you create, receive or collect this information, you will need to look after it properly.
Managing digital information properly is a complex issue. Doing it correctly from the start could save you a lot of time and hassle when preparing a publication or writing up your thesis.
Managing your data well is a key responsibility as a researcher and it prevents disasters. You will encounter research data in many forms, ranging from measurements, numbers and images to documents and publications.
Whether you create, receive or collect this information, you will need to look after it properly.
Managing digital information properly is a complex issue. Doing it correctly from the start could save you a lot of time and hassle when preparing a publication or writing up your thesis.
Using a reference manager is one of the best ways to look after crucial research literature, whether planning for a literature review or simply keeping track of developments in a particular discipline. This session will introduce Endnote.
Using live demonstrations, discussions, and troubleshooting common referencing issues, the session will give an in-depth look at how Endnote (and tools like it) can help maximise a research project workflow while also ensuring that critical resources and information are not lost at any point in the research process.