Thursday, November 13, 2008

Thing 23: Feedback



Well... it took me a little longer than first anticipated, but I've just finished "my" 23 Things!!
Although I had heard about most of this stuff I hadn't really had a chance to investigate properly and definitely hadn't thought about how it could contribute to my work. Now that I've used various tools and services I can see that some might be useful, but others I may not use again.
  • useful things (which I'll probably use again) include: blogs, delicious, flickr, Google Docs, podcasts, RSS feeds, social bookmarks, web based communication tools

  • things I probably won't use again (but glad I know about!) include: Facebook and iGoogle - only because I value my privacy and not sure how flexible iGoogle is for my own needs

It's been a worthwhile enterprise in that I will now be able to answer users' queries and has also given me some insight into how new technologies can be used to support teaching and learning and to add value to the more traditional* library services we will continue to offer.

* For traditional, read Libraryish!
(Image credit: Ian Kim)


Thing 22: Communication

I decided to use MSN Messenger because I've used it before. I also use Skype regularly to keep in touch with family and friends. The beauty of these services is that they are easy to use and much more cost-effective than using the telephone. I like the immediacy of Messenger too.

The advantage to libraries would also be cost-effectiveness and online communication services like Google Talk and MSN Messenger would allow library users to ask a question and get an answer in real time.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Thing 21: Podcasts

Much like YouTube, the ability to download and listen to (or view) a variety of broadcast media via the web is another valuable teaching and learning tool. I have found an excellent series of libraryish podcasts produced by SirsiDynix on EPN (Education Podcast Network). The SirsiDynix Institute podcasts will add to my knowledge of many of the topics we've already covered in the 23 Things programme.

Thing 20: YouTube

YouTube is a great source for videos covering all subject areas. Remarkably, a search for "libraryish" picked-up a number of hits, some serious and some not so serious - like this film produced by Library staff at Harper College:


So let's hop on a library cart and take a tour...

These guys have given me a few ideas for our next round of student inductions... or at least voiced it in a way I'd like to be able to do it, but we'd never patronise our users in such an obvious way... would we?? On a more serious note, YouTube has huge potential as a teaching and learning tool and can add interest to presentations, though all things in moderation!

Thing 19: Wikis

If only I had a real Meerkat for a pet!

Adding a photo of my pet to the VU Wikibrary was straightforward, so all looks pretty simple to me! I've often thought that wikis could be a good way to allow a group of people who are based in different locations to view and edit the same information via the web. Having also used Google Docs, I think I would probably use that as a way to share documents, but wikis might be better for sharing non-text based materials.
More investigations may follow...!

Any reservations I have about wikis (and Wikipedia in particular) are linked to some of the issues mentioned in my previous post (Thing 18: Library 2.0) and the need for library & information professionals to advise their users that not everything they view online is correct. In my best libraryish manner; I always advise students, that if they must use Wikipedia, they should also check some other independent, peer-reviewed sources to be sure that the "facts" they are quoting are indeed correct.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Thing 18: Library 2.0

I guess the old-fashioned, libraryish type person (like me!) ought to be a bit more aware of the latest library developments, even if just to understand what our users are talking about. Having read many of the Library 2.0 articles (suggested on the 23 Things Victoria University Library 2.0 blog) I am now more familiar with the latest discussions, as put forward by our peers, but still trying to work out whether Library 2.0 is a "good" or a "bad" thing for libraries?

It seems to me that librarians and information scientists are more interested than are our users in what Library 2.0 can do, and laudable as our intentions may be, perhaps we've been a bit blinded by science? My experience is that the majority of people who use Web 2.0 applications don't necessarily want to know how these things work or even how they can integrate applications to take advantage of the richness and diversity they can offer as learning and research tools; most users just want to connect with other people and have fun. There have been numerous discussions amongst academics, researchers, librarians, etc. as to the usefulness of Web 2.0 for teaching and learning. An article written for Guardian Education by Harriet Swain and published on the guardian.co.uk web site offers an interesting insight into the pros and cons.

I like the flexibility offered by products like Encore and federated searching, and I also like the way that Library 2.0 developments allow for an enhanced dialogue between libraries and their users, but I'm wary of all the claims offered by the technical brigade and the ability of many of our users to take advantage (in a productive way) of what's on offer. The recent publication of a book called The Dumbest Generation (by Mark Bauerlein) highlights some of the problems inherent in our rush to embrace the internet and related technologies. In an interview on the ABC's radio programme Counterpoint, Professor Bauerlein argues that our dependence on computers and the internet has resulted in a worrying decline in levels of literacy and lack of initiative amongst young Americans. The same kind of problem has also been highlighted in a UK report called, Information Behaviour of the Researcher of the Future, which was commissioned by the British Library and JISC and produced by CIBER. The report argues that the so-called "Google Generation" (young people born or brought-up since the inception of the internet) are not the most web-literate generation and lack the skills required to find relevant information on the internet. Although all this "doom-saying" may be ringing alarm bells for many people, it may be that librarians and information scientists are best placed to act for positive change by providing information literacy skills and helping people to gain the skills to do what we do best - find things and evaluate their usefulness!

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Thing 17: delicious

I've used delicious before, and I think it's a fab idea! All my favourite web sites accessible on the same page... from any PC... that's got to be a good thing?!

I find the whole concept of social bookmarking, social networking and folksonomies fascinating - could this be the collective unconscious made tangible? Will the rules of cataloguing and classification become redundant or are we allowing the patients to take-over the asylum? The debate rages (in more than one forum) as to whether it's a good idea to abandon traditional, libraryish ideas such as authority control and subject headings, but if these "old fashioned" approaches to information are no longer relevant, how do we stay informed? Perhaps social bookmarking sites will become the new authority control?

Monday, October 27, 2008

Thing 16: iGoogle

iGoogle is a great idea for people who use lots of different web tools and want to have everything easily available on one page. I tend to use favourites and bookmarks, but have often "lost" links to well-used sites, so this could be a solution as iGoogle can be accessed from any PC.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Thing 15: Google Book Search & Google Scholar

Although the search worked for both Google Book Search and Google Scholar, the results were patchy. As a libraryish sort of person, I know that library catalogues or OPACs have been designed to guide users to the most relevant items and will be linked (through classification systems, metadata, subjects, indexing, etc.) to other useful items in a clear, meaningful way. Both Google Book Search and Google Scholar appear to produce a list of hits in a seemingly arbitrary way, so it's not that easy to know how useful results will be? I know that there are advanced search options available, but I suspect the majority of Google users don't want to be bothered with this... the same way most library users don't want to be bothered with advanced search options in OPACs!

I do like the option to search for items held in a variety of libraries, but I would probably continue to use a service like Libraries Australia or the Australian Libraries Gateway from the National Library of Australia to find items held in other libraries - and trust the results.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Thing 14: Posted from Google Docs

One of my favourite quotations:

Sooner or later I too may passively take the print
Of the golden age — why not? I have neither hope nor trust;
May make my heart as a millstone, set my face as a flint,
Cheat and be cheated, and die: who knows? We are ashes and dust.

(Alfred, Lord Tennyson - Maud, Part I)

Monday, October 13, 2008

Thing 13: Google Maps

It's amazing how detailed these maps are, and also a bit scary! I can see my house, cars parked on the street outside, even my rubbish bins - not very aesthetically pleasing, but certainly realistic.

Google Maps is really useful if you need to find your way round an unfamiliar place or for directions to a particular spot. A slight drawback is that satellite imagery can be patchy for some areas (I wasn't able to see Philip Island in close detail) and images can date quite quickly.

Overall, it's easy to use, but somehow doesn't seem as friendly as looking through Melways !

Friday, October 10, 2008

Thing 12: MySpace & Facebook

I suppose I had to give in eventually and add a profile to Facebook ! Having done that I'm now wondering if I'll be bombarded with notifications of interest, poked or spied upon (who knows how many "lurkers" might be out there?) or pretty much ignored... and which would be worse?!

However, the potential to contact huge numbers of people must be a bonus for libraries and I can see how MySpace or Facebook would allow many libraries to advertise their presence and make people more aware of what they are doing.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Things 10 & 11: RSS Feeds & Blogs

As stated in the VU 23 Things blog posting for RSS feeds & blogs, Digg is a bit geeky and American centric. However, it is a useful place to start if you're confused by the vastness of the blogosphere by giving the option to search by subject, popularity, etc. Although it was fairly simple to add subscriptions to my Google Reader account, I wasn't able to get any search alerts feeds from EBSCO added, so perhaps this needs a bit more work on my part? Not sure if other people had more success with this or other database feeds?

I like the concept of Technorati but again found it a bit too American centric and had to do a lot of searching before I found any "libraryish" blogs that appealed to me.

I actually found it more useful to go to a site that I'm already familiar with: Internet Resources Newsletter This e-journal is produced on a monthly basis by staff at Heriot-Watt University Library in Edinburgh (Scotland) and it's always chock full of interesting stuff that might appeal to academics, students and more particularly library staff - well worth adding to your RSS feed reader. Each issue features a whole host of useful links and reviews, and includes a section called "Blogorama" - this section highlights "selected interesting blogs, RSS feeds and related news items" and this is where I found some of the library blogs listed on the right.

This has been the most challenging group of Things tasks to complete, but I can see that the ability to aggregate feeds using a reader makes keeping up-to-date much easier, so I will persevere. I can highly recommend Obnoxious Librarian from Hades - and you have to admit we all have days when we wish some of our users to... well, Hades!

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Thing 9: Feed Readers

I can see why it might be useful to have a feed set-up for your favourite news site(s), but I can also see that one would rapidly be drowned in a sea of information, especially if you subscribe to more than one feed.

I didn't find Google Reader particularly intuitive to use and although I've set-up some subscriptions I don't think I would necessarily find it helpful to receive news every time there is an update. However, I might find the perfect "libraryish" site and would hate to miss out on the latest developments? The search continues...

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Thing 8: LibraryThing

LibraryThing is fantastic! I've only added a few titles matching books from my 'real' library at home, and wondering how long it would take to add the rest (being very 'libraryish', I've got thousands of them!) This site must be a cataloguer's/control freak's dream?! Spoken as a cataloguer & control freak...

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Thing 7: Swedish Furniture Name



Yup, it's possible to have a piece of furniture named after you (or in this case, named after my blog)!

I found this on The Generator Blog

Thing 5 & 6: Librarian Avengers


This must be my favourite image of a librarian ever! Imagine the tone of voice - a harsh whisper, spoken through clenched teeth (like Clint Eastwood... only higher pitched?) as she says for the 100th time that day, "Look it up..."

I found the image on flickr, but remember having seen it many years ago when I was directed to the Librarian Avengers blog and I agree, we should all fall on our knees and worship a librarian!

Thing 2: Libraryish2 Arrives on Blogger

Having heeded the advice of my colleagues, I have now switched from WordPress to Blogger to achieve more of the 23 Things. This is my first post, so I'm on my way!