Publicly Accessible Resources: Open Materials
Community Resources
Welcome Hokies!
THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES SUPPORTS THE COMMUNITY AS A WHOLE, NOT JUST STUDENTS, FACULTY, AND STAFF.
Check out this website for details about ALL the resources the Libraries has for you, not just the databases, journals, and information contained in this resource guide.
Open courseware
California Learning Resource Network http://www.clrn.org
Curriki http://www.curriki.org
Saylor.org Academy http://www.saylor.org
Open source software
Presentation, spreadsheet, and word processing
Computer code libraries
Primary Source Sets
Digital Public Library of America (DPLA) Primary Source Sets
Free databases
- Biodiversity Heritage LibraryBHL contains scanned, historic, biological literature from major natural history museum libraries, botanical libraries, and research institutions: books, journals, and more. Content can be downloaded as PDF, ASCII, or just the images contained within the object. 1480-present.
- PubMed from NLMIndexes citations, abstracts and full text from journal articles, case studies, conference papers, clinical trial reports, news reports, and reviews in the fields of medicine,nursing, dentistry, veterinary medicine, the health care system, and pre-clinical sciences. Full text available in HTML and PDF. You can limit to types of clinical queries, age, gender and species of subject, and review articles that summaries research on a topic. 1946-present.
- PubAg from the USDAPubAg indexes citations and full-text of agricultural scientific literature. 1997-present.
- PLANTS DatabaseThe PLANTS Database provides standardized information about the vascular plants, mosses, liverworts, hornworts, and lichens of the U.S. and its territories. Fact Sheets provide brief descriptions of a plant, its uses, and cultural recommendations. Plant Guides are similar but more extensive. Both are provided as PDFs. The database also includes an image gallery of photos and line drawings of U.S. plants plus cultivated or foreign taxa.
- Making of America from the University of MichiganMaking of America (MoA) is a digital library of primary sources in American social history from the antebellum period through reconstruction. The collection is particularly strong in the subject areas of education, psychology, American history, sociology, religion, and science and technology. Content is available in text, GIF, and PDF formats. 1840-1900.
Digital libraries and repositories
Directory of Open Access Repositories - OpenDOAR
Registry of Open Access Repositories
Smithsonian Institution Digital Library
Perseus Digital Library (Greco-Roman literature, culture etc.)
Journals
- Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ)A one stop shop for Open Access Journals (journals with a funding model that does not charge readers or their institutions for access). Journals must exercise peer-review or editorial quality control to be included. All subject areas are covered. Uses can search by journal title or browse titles. No searching of contents of journals is provided. Journals listed in the DOAJ will also be listed in our Journal Title Database.
- JSTORJSTOR is an archive of journals from the humanities, social science, and sciences. It is not a comprehensive index of any of these subjects. Articles are available as PDFs back to volume one for most journals which have a "rolling wall" that excludes content from the last several years of publication. Virginia Tech access includes: JSTOR Arts and Sciences Archive Collections I - XV, Business Archive IV and the following collections:
Life Sciences, Sustainability, Ireland, and Security Studies.
AGRICOLA from USDA
AGRICOLA serves as the public catalog of the National Agricultural Library. It contains records for all of the holdings of the Library. It also contains citations to articles, much like PubAg. AGRICOLA also contains citations to many items that, while valuable and relevant to the agricultural sciences, are not peer-reviewed journal articles. Also, AGRICOLA has a different interface. So, while there is some overlap between the two resources, they are different in significant ways.