Full-time, regular faculty and faculty emeritus at Chicago Theological Seminary are granted full use privileges of the Learning Commons and its resources.
Additional services include the following:
Adjunct faculty have borrowing and access privileges for the term they are employed by the seminary as follows:
Course Research Instruction
The library provides course research instruction at the request of faculty. This type of instruction will be tailored to the need of the course. The library welcomes the opportunity to co-design instructional materials for in-person and online coursework. Topics that can be covered by the Learning Commons include:
All required and recommended course books are kept on the reserve shelf behind the circulation desk in the Learning Commons and will be available for students to check out for up to three hours.
Serious efforts are made to provide course readings in ebook format where available.
It should be noted that there are different usage licenses for ebooks. What this means is that some ebooks can only be viewed by one student at a time, much like physical books. In this case, students will receive a message that the book is currently in use and that they should try to access the ebook later. Other ebooks have licenses for three users to access the book simultaneously. The Learning Commons does try to purchase licenses for unlimited users when offered by our ebook vendors.
Course readings for each semester will be listed in OneSearch.
Please use the permalink when linking to resources in the Learning Commons. Do not grab links for Learning Commons materials from the browser window as this link is temporary and will not work later.
Streaming film collections in the Learning Commons include Kanopy. The films from this platform can be embedded in your Canvas course. Access to streaming films can change from semester to semester, so be sure to verify the content you need is still available.
Please consult our Copyright and Fair Use guide for a review of best practices around copyright and fair use.