2005-06 Undergraduate Catalog
Indiana, Pennsylvania 15705

 

Resources

 

•  Computing Services

•  Libraries

•  Centers and Institutes

 


Computing Services

All students have access to an extensive set of web-based services, including class registration, schedule planning, and records management. Students are also provided with an e-mail account and a network account, which afford personal disk space for e-mail, projects, and web pages. Technical support is available at the Student Computing Help Desk via telephone at 724-357-2198, email at student-helpdesk@iup.edu, or the website www.iup.edu/ats/sts.

 

Student access to computing is provided, for the most part, through the public computing laboratories. The primary public labs are strategically placed around campus to maximize their availability and impact. Several departments maintain computing facilities that are of a focused nature and which are intended to support specific programs. These include several specialized networks to address particular needs.

 

Academic computing support is provided by technical staff assigned to each college. The college staffs provide computational support for undergraduate and graduate students and for faculty and student research.

 

Connectivity for student computers in the residence halls is provided through the Office of Housing and Residence Life. The administrative needs of the university are served by the Technology Services Center.

 

The university’s computing infrastructure consists of Windows-based clients and servers and Unix-based servers. Access to the network is provided from every campus building, including the residence halls, utilizing a fiberoptic backbone. Wireless network access is also provided from various locations across campus. Discounted dial-up access is available to students living off campus as well as faculty and staff via an arrangement with a local Internet service provider. IUP is connected to the Internet and Internet 2 via SSHEnet.

 

Through implementation of its strategic computing plan, which is part of the university long-range planning process, the university is committed to providing the level of computing and information technology necessary for a modern institution of higher education. Guidance in this area is provided by both the Academic Computing Policy Advisory Committee and the Administrative Computing Oversight Committee.

  

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Libraries

Patrick J. Stapleton Jr., Library, the central library for IUP, was completed and dedicated in 1981. It adjoins Rhodes R. Stabley Library, which results in a combined structure of 156,000 square feet. The Cogswell Music Library and the branch campus libraries in Kittanning and Punxsutawney are the other components of the IUP Library system. Fifteen library faculty members, seventeen support staff members, and over 150 students are employed in the Libraries division of the university.

 

The book collection contains 841,881 volumes, there are 2,626 periodical subscriptions, 1.8 million items of microforms, over 128,000 bound periodicals and over 33,387 volumes of governmental publications (IUP is designated Select Depository for federal and state publications). The libraries’ media holdings in all formats are extensive. Resources are supplemented through membership in OCLC for interlibrary loan, the Health Sciences Consortium (North Carolina), and the Laurel Highlands Consortium. The IUP Libraries are active members of the State System’s Keystone Library Network, and through the KLN, the university has a shared on-line catalog and receives many electronic databases. The Libraries are also charter members of the Pennsylvania Academic Library Consortium Initiative and receive direct loans from the state’s major university and college libraries.

 

The central library is open 92 hours a week during regular terms. The Cogswell Music Library, located on the top floor of Cogswell Hall, contains approximately 10,000 books, 15,000 scores, 10,000 recordings, and 2,000 CDs. Holdings of monumental editions are substantial. Sound recordings circulate only to faculty members, but listening stations are available for use by all patrons.

 

The Armstrong County Campus Library has more than 24,000 volumes, and the Punxsutawney Library contains more than 15,000 books, eighty-six periodical subscriptions, and recordings of music, poetry, and drama.

 

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IUP Centers and Institutes

The School of Graduate Studies and Research provides coordinating and support functions for campus-based centers and institutes through the Office of the Assistant Dean for Research. Centers and institutes serve a variety of functions. Each center or institute is unique in its focus and is created to meet a specifically identified need. Centers and institutes provide an opportunity for faculty members to utilize their expertise through consultation, technical assistance, and research-related activities. Centers and institutes provide excellent opportunities for students to learn, to demonstrate their knowledge and skills, and to become involved in meaningful projects in the community. Centers and institutes strengthen the research and public service missions of the university and, therefore, enhance the quality of education.

 

A current listing of centers and institutes at IUP follows.

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This information is maintained by the Office of the Registrar, with approval from the University Senate.