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Friday, November 4, 2005
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and there is letting them lead us to where we discover for ourselves.
(highly recommended)
So
Many Digital Divides to Bridge, So Little Time (and Resources and Money
and Staff and....)
Digital
Divide Multiplied
"One thing that did
occur to me yesterday, that I think is important, is the nature of our
digital divide. There are lots of digital divides, each with its own
seeds for danger. What I was thinking about was the digital divide
between tech-savvy students and students with little or no access to
networked digital information outside the classroom -- and to some
extent, the digital divide between tech-savvy students and less-savvy
teachers.
The literacy divide of the 20th century distinguished between people
who could functionally read and those who could not. Democracy was
certainly at stake, but to no small degree, so was commerce. The
literate could consume the messages of content producers.
Today, the divide has multiplied, because people with contemporary
(digital/21st century) literacy skills not only consume content, but
they are the content. Being literate means being part of the network.
The difference is not merely the individual who can read and individual
who can not. It's the difference between networked communities of
power, and individuals who are cut off. This is a distinction too broad
to ignore or postpone.
Consider IM Speak,
the abbreviations that students use in their instant message
conversations. It is, in no small way, a new grammar, and these
students invented it spontaneously in collaboration. The industrial
literacy way would have been to assign a standards committee to
establish a new grammar, and then spend years teaching it in our
classrooms. We should be amazed and in awe of this accomplishment. It
happened not because these kids were digitally literate, but because
being digitally literate meant being part of a network -- a community
of power.
Where is our community of power?" [2 Cents Worth]
David Warlick posted these thoughts in regards to education, but I
think they're very relevant for librarians, too. After all, we're
supposed to be the safety net for the digital divide(s), right, whether
it's access or information literacy? I'm becoming more and more
convinced that libraries will have to find a way to help fill the
coming divide of content-creators (those who think of themselves as
creators with the skills necessary to actually create) versus strictly
consumers (the old model in which the person simply ingests everything
as one-way media and doesn't participate in these new networks and
resources because they can't or didn't even know they could). On the
one side, you have great models like Lane
and Matthew, but on the
other side you have millions of kids I can't even point to because
they're left out of this community.
One model to combat this: Bloomington Public
Library.
Side note: check out this other great post by David: Something
from my Research, which includes the following statement in the
comments (read the post for context):
"I liked these rules because they were worded for the
learner, not against undesired behaviors. They grant students
the right to learn, rather than defining a container within which to
behave like students."
[ The Shifted Librarian]
10:05:22 PM
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and there is listening to librarian's think out loud
(highly recommended)
internet
librarian 05: my keynote
...how much things have changed since the 2003 conference, as evidenced
by things I overheard on Monday morning:
- "yeah, they're talking about social software and blogs and all
that stuff." -- in a classic "that's so 5 minutes ago" voice
- "I flickr'ed a photo of you and Stephen Abrams."
- "it's blah blah flickr blah blah tags blah blah don't be afraid..."
(literally)...
internet
librarian 05: karen schneider on blogging ethics
...On a "micro" level, your blog represents you and everything you're
connected with, including librarianship. Great quote: "For most
readers, you are the last stop between the reader and the truth." From
a utilitarian standpoint, being ethical is a strategic approach.
Information has a long half-life. Being ethical is a form of
self-preservation... "the blogosphere can be cruel. the biblioblogosphere
can be crueler."
On a "macro" level, "The harder we work to make the world a moral
place, the better it is for everyone." She points out that
librarianship is a profession defined by its concern for others -- witness
librarians' willingness to go to jail rather than provide information
about patrons.
She flashes some "rules of blogging," but they're gone before I can
look up from my screen. :)
Five things not to say about your blog
- It's only a blog
- So-and-so does it
- Everyone understood what I meant
- They can always look up
- Nobody trusts the web anyway
Key Rules.... {go, read, enjoy, maybe learn}
[ mamamusings]
"The harder we work to make the world a moral
place, the better it is for everyone."
9:35:18 PM
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Posted by thomas
crampton
Defining the poor is common (The World
Bank's one dollar per day level, for example)
But who are the rich?
If you can read this posting, you are
likely rich.
Anyone with a university education and an
income at or above the lower-middle class level for an OECD country is
rich, I would argue. Being rich is more about having time and freedom
to make choices about your life than bagfulls of money.
Joi's latest
posting may suggest a way to measure wealth through a Technorati
rating!
What is the best metric to define someone
as rich?
9:05:19 PM
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© Copyright 2005 Russ Savage.
Last update: 12/26/05; 8:12:58 AM.
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