Languages at the Continuing Education Library

The Library’s language learning section has expanded recently with integration of the Language Centre’s holdings into the Continuing Education Library at Rewley House.   We have materials covering Arabic, Chinese (Mandarin), Dutch, French, German, Greek, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish. 

Our language collections are available for borrowing by all members of Oxford University and to all members of OUDCE including short course students. Bodleian readers (who are not members of Oxford University or OUDCE) are also welcome to use the collection on a reference only basis.

Currently our language collections are split over two locations within Rewley House – the main library where language materials are shelved at 430-499 in the lower library (in both oversize and regular size) and in the Language Collections Temporary Annexe.  Ask staff in the Library for directions to the Annexe.   Over the coming months all the language materials will be brought together in the main library. Enjoy

Opening hours for the 2025

The Library’s opening hours change at different times of the year with evening and weekend opening during Continuing Education Library’s termtime (3 blocks of 11 weeks each), more limited weekend opening during the Oxford University Summer Schools for Adults (OUSSA) and weekday daytime only opening during the vacations.

The current opening hours are always shown on our home page but you can also check the opening hours for the whole year.

Bodleian iSkills workshops for 6th week

Some really useful iSkills workshops for research students and academic colleagues taking place 24 Feb – 27 Feb (6th week)

Working with sensitive research data (Tuesday 25 February 10:00-12:00)

This workshop outlines some of the key principles to bear in mind when working with sensitive or restricted research; whether collected yourself or obtained from a third-party source such as a data archive. Issues of confidentiality, informed consent, cybersecurity and data management will be covered. The role of support services at Oxford will also be outlined and in particular the role of the Bodleian Data Librarian who will lead the session.
Format: Classroom-based (Social Science Library)
Booking essential – To book a place click on the title above – you’ll need to scroll down the page to find the booking details

Searching for patents and standards (Tuesday 25 February 13:00-14:00)

Patents and standards are a valuable source of technical information relevant to the fields of engineering, materials sciences, and more. Together, they provide approved rules and guidelines whilst helping to protect inventions and innovative ideas. They can, however, be tricky to find. Join this session to find out more about what patents and standards are, why they might be useful for your research and how to find them in specific databases.
Format: Classroom-based (Radcliffe Science Library)
Booking essential – To book a place click on the title above – you’ll need to scroll down the page to find the booking details

Open Scholarship: Your thesis, copyright & ORA (Tuesday 25 February 15:00-16:00)

Oxford DPhil students are required to deposit a copy of their thesis in the Oxford University Research Archive (ORA). This online session will focus on what ORA is and how to deposit one’s thesis in ORA, and how to access help with this process. It will also cover the relevant rights and permissions required and other issues that DPhil students need to take into account when preparing their thesis for upload to ORA.
Who is this session for? All doctoral research students.
Format: Online using Microsoft Teams.
Booking essential – To book a place click on the title above – you’ll need to scroll down the page to find the booking details

Open Scholarship: Introduction to Persistent Identifiers (Wednesday 26 February 14:00-15:30)

This course will introduce you to the concept of Persistent Identifiers, the problems that they address, and how they can be used in the academic environment to simplify some tasks. It will examine several different types of identifier, some of which are currently widely used (DOI’s for publications/data and ORCID’s for researchers) and others which are emerging in importance.
Format: Online using Microsoft Teams.
Booking essential – To book a place click on the title above – you’ll need to scroll down the page to find the booking details

Copyright the card game (Thursday 27 February
09:00-12:00 )

This interactive, games-based session introduces you to the key concepts of copyright law and allows you to apply them in practice. No prior knowledge is required, and the session caters for all whatever their level of experience with copyright. At the end of the session participants will be able to: explore how copyright really works in practice; interpret the legislation and apply the relevant legal concepts to their own work; practice using the exceptions and licences in sector-specific examples; and discuss the role of risk management in making decisions about the ethical creation and use of copyright material.
Format: Classroom-based (Radcliffe Science Library)
Booking essential – To book a place click on the title above – you’ll need to scroll down the page to find the booking details