Saturday, February 16, 2008

Thing 2 - Perspectives on Library 2.0

I've already felt the frustration of lacking a connection to many of the teens in my high school library. I'm a book lover, but they could care less about reading a book. At the least they peruse magazines. For research, they grab the bibliographic information from a book without ever reading a page. For them, Google is all you need to research a topic. It seems like I'm swimming against the current in trying to get them to use databases and "old-fashioned" books. Maybe I am a dinosaur.

I've seen libraries already using some of these exciting tools, whether to make themselves relevant, or simply as a applicable way to achieve a time-honored function. Virtual reference is one good example I can think of. When I first read about it, I recognized its usefulness, but could not see it within my high school culture, because of a lack of personnel and time. Public libraries or a college setting seem more likely to be able to handle it. Web 2.0 may offer all kinds of "toys," but librarians need to take an honest look at those "toys." Some may be a better way to deliver services they always have, but some may not be feasible either.

Schools in general are lagging in policies for allowing library 2.0 tools to be used. Our internet acceptable use policy prohibits any two-way communication tools for students. Being afraid of controlling such communication, we block it altogether. I've seen some discussion on the topic in professional journals and on list-servs. Many feel we are doing students and ourselves a disservice to totally block social networking sites and IM. We ignore the reality of the lifestyles students lead and how they are getting their information. School library media specialists will have to be at the forefront in leading change in this arena. The trust issue brought up in "The Ongoing Web Revolution" resonates with me. It is at the heart of schools' reluctance to allow such uses of the Web.

I applaud the multitypes for this 23 things on a stick program to help us all take the first step in experiencing some of these tools. It will be up to us to decide which ones make sense to use in our settings. It's all exiting, challenging, and terribly frightening.

1 comment:

Cindy said...

I understand your concerns as I watch my own youngsters...but our challenge now is how we make information more relevant to them. That is quality above quantity and ease of use.

As you will discover...Things can be use in so many ways....Take the various ways you can use Flickr or shall we say some of the more advanced tools...under more Flickr fun there is "splashr"...take a look and imagine photos of books on a desktop flashing at students...add in some text on alternate slides and draw them in...like the movie posters or trailers of yesteryear...my son recently read "Diary of a Wimpy Kid" and all the kids are crazy for it...I think it would be cool to alternate between the cover and text bringing attention to the journal itself...if the publishers can do it, so can we...

Just thinking....Keep blogging!

Cindy Gruwell
CMLE 23 Things