Difference between revisions of "Borrow Direct"

From WikiCU
Jump to: navigation, search
m (Reverted edits by VillageGirl (Talk); changed back to last version by Venus in Furs)
Line 6: Line 6:
 
Much faster than Interlibrary Loan (ILL), Borrow Direct is a great way to obtain books that are checked out, on reserve or otherwise unavailable in the Columbia University library system.
 
Much faster than Interlibrary Loan (ILL), Borrow Direct is a great way to obtain books that are checked out, on reserve or otherwise unavailable in the Columbia University library system.
  
Borrow Direct books have a loan period of 6 weeks. No renewals are permitted.  
+
Borrow Direct books have a loan period of 4 weeks. No renewals are permitted. However, lending institutions rarely proceed to charge overdue fines for late books despite the fact that patrons are warned that such fines may be charged and strongly advised to return items promptly for the maintenance of "good relationships with our partner libraries."
  
 
If available, requested materials will be ready for pickup within four business days of the original request. In one user's totally subjective personal experience, [[Yale]] and [[Princeton]] libraries are fastest (sometimes delivering books within one day).  
 
If available, requested materials will be ready for pickup within four business days of the original request. In one user's totally subjective personal experience, [[Yale]] and [[Princeton]] libraries are fastest (sometimes delivering books within one day).  

Revision as of 09:53, 16 May 2008

Borrow Direct logo

Borrow Direct is an interlibrary borrowing service offered by all of the Ivy League Universities except Harvard.

It allows students, faculty and staff at these institutions to request books directly from each others' collections.

Much faster than Interlibrary Loan (ILL), Borrow Direct is a great way to obtain books that are checked out, on reserve or otherwise unavailable in the Columbia University library system.

Borrow Direct books have a loan period of 4 weeks. No renewals are permitted. However, lending institutions rarely proceed to charge overdue fines for late books despite the fact that patrons are warned that such fines may be charged and strongly advised to return items promptly for the maintenance of "good relationships with our partner libraries."

If available, requested materials will be ready for pickup within four business days of the original request. In one user's totally subjective personal experience, Yale and Princeton libraries are fastest (sometimes delivering books within one day).

External links