 We all agree that film is a tremendous pedagogical resource that can be used in the classroom across the disciplines. Here at Tulane, we are privileged to have one of the broadest film collections in the region, and in media services at Howard Tilton Memorial Library, we've developed a number of services to support your teaching. The film collections provided by Howard Tilton Memorial Library are both streaming and physical. Our streaming titles, of course, can be viewed wherever there's an internet connection. Recognizing that personal DVD or Blu-ray players are no longer household items, you'll find several viewing stations on the sixth floor of Howard Tilton Memorial Library. We also have portable USB disc readers, as well as Blu-ray players, available to check out from the sixth floor service desk for as long as one week. Many faculty ask about clips. Media services does not have the capacity to create clips for you, but many of our streaming platforms have that functionality built in so you can create and save your own custom clips and easily share them with your class and your Canvas page. Streaming platforms in our portfolio that have clipping include Academic Video Online, DocuSeq, Canopy, and Lumiere. An important service is media reserves. The majority of our streaming titles are only available to us with one or three-year access licenses. This means a film available today may not be available tomorrow. Since most of our platforms do not make the expiration date visible, this can be difficult for planning. To help with this, we redesigned traditional physical media reserves to include streaming titles as well. When you fill out your reserve request form, simply include all the titles you plan to screen in class, regardless of whether we currently have access or not. The media service team has a rigorous workflow in place to verify expiration dates and flag titles for renewal as necessary, as well as to comb through all streaming access options available to us. Finally, all of our films may be used in the classroom setting. A campus screening, however, requires public performance rights, which only a portion of our film has. If you see a film in our collection that you'd like to screen but are unsure of the rights, simply email media-services-at-two-lane.edu and we'll verify the type of screening rights available for that film. If you have any questions or need help finding a film, please reach out to us at media-services-at-two-lane.edu.