shares
 

New From Overleaf: A Collection of LibGuides

By Shelly Miller

To further strengthen our partnership with academic libraries, we have published a collection of guides on the LibGuides platform which are designed to help librarians with:

  • informing students and faculty about all of the features of Overleaf;
  • curating and disseminating links to a wide range of helpful LaTeX resources.

If you’re not a librarian, it’s possible that you may not be aware of the LibGuides platform: it is widely used to collect, curate and share information of relevance and interest to all sections and members of a librarian’s user community—via an easy-to-use website.

Screenshot of an Overleaf LibGuide

We are delighted to launch this service, starting with three Overleaf LibGuides:

Each guide contains links to numerous resources, including:

  • video tutorials on how to use Overleaf;
  • in-depth blog articles and tutorials on LaTeX;
  • quick hints and short help articles;
  • Overleaf LaTeX templates for journal articles, books, theses, etc.;
  • overview content on using LaTeX for theses and dissertations.

All of the information and content on the LibGuide platform is shareable via the LibGuide community and can be added to your local library guide and customized with links to your Overleaf institutional portal and your University’s LaTeX thesis template.

We warmly invite the librarian community to explore these Overleaf LibGuides and let us know if we should create additional guides to help inform your students and faculty about the power of Overleaf and LaTeX. Contact us via email at support@overleaf.com or via our contact web form if you have any questions or if you'd like to suggest additional guides on other topics related to Overleaf.

Shelly Miller

Shelly Miller

Sales & Academic Outreach Manager

Passionate about education and art, and enthusiastic about supporting a creative, innovative technology that is making a positive difference in collaborative scientific research and publishing worldwide.