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    Knowledge Management

    October 21, 2007

    GN: What Should I Tell the Librarians? - I have some ideas


      Living in a Book 
      Originally uploaded by eschipul

    What do you tell the librarians?

    Global Neighbourhoods asks "what should I tell the librarians?" for an upcoming talk on social media to a group of librarians.

    First lets talk about the audience. Librarians are the most over educated, in a good way, people who are typically underpaid worse than teachers. A challenging masters frequently relegates them to book guardians at a local library doling out fines. And baby sitting kids whose parents view the library as a day care.

    Librarians are museum curators trying to decide if their mission is to protect the exhibits or share the exhibits (note most museum curators go for "protect and hide" hence the no-photography rules at so many American museums. But I digress.)

    I say this from the perspective of someone with two librarians in my family. Neither of them work as librarians any more.

    What I have found about librarians is they have a natural desire to help. To share knowledge more than just information. One phone call can save hours of google searches looking for just the right search phrase. Just as going to a conference made me understand how important Goffman was when no amount of google searches would have generated pop-up box saying "no really, you need to read this one!"

    So what to tell the librarians. Tell them that:

    1) Librarians are Teachers - The biggest digital divide is more cultural than economic in the US at least. Having access to a free blogging platform in no way teaches the ethos and culture of the blogosphere. So they should view part of their jobs as teaching the public about social software tools. These tools are vehicles that bridge the digital divide (three of the last four people we hired were bloggers. We ask every applicant and recruit bloggers. So a librarian-teacher could help kids in the neighborhood get real jobs IF they understand social media.

    2) Specialize - with the explosion of available information you can't just be an "academic librarian" or a "community librarian". You need to specialize.

    3) Virtualize - given limited budgets, they should be not only using social software tools themselves to connect to other librarians, but helping the public do the same. Form a super-librarian-group on facebook that enables them to connect people with the right librarian.

    Continue reading "GN: What Should I Tell the Librarians? - I have some ideas" »

    January 27, 2007

    Limitations of Folksonomies for Non Profits

    Folksonomies are to taxonomies what content management systems are to webmasters; they free the people. And the people do what people do. And that is good. Even for the NPTech tag stream. I say this in reaction to this riff on the limitations of folksonomies for the non profit world. From the post:

    I've always been vaguely uncomfortable with folksonomies. There is something about the concept that just doesn't sit right with me. Every time I hear people wax on about them, I fidget in my seat; I feel kind of itchy and unsettled at the same time. Perhaps it's my latent, leftover librarian-like nature.

    Given a tag like NPTech applies to, as Gavin notes, a "tax status", it is not surprising that it is confusing. Yet so would reading all information in a hierarchical taxonomy under "China" (sub classed in Asia in the Library of Congress if I recall Shirky correctly.) The classification is simply too large. Which is why we use multiple word phrases when we search google.

    It sounds to me like the original non profit taxonomy project needs to be revived. To create a Taxonomy to be used in-addition to the folksonomy in the NPTech space. And perhaps there is a hybrid where a person can pick a dictionary of recommended tags. Similar to the synonym ring used by libraries.

    September 17, 2006

    Citizendium is to Foo as Wikipedia is to Bar

    Citizendium aspires to have a group of intellectuals create moderated great ideas. Like foo camp has an invited group of intellectuals.

    Wikipedia aspires to have editors from the willing and takes all comers. Like bar camp has unconferences of the willing.

    Some background:

    Citizendium is being started by Larry Sanger, one of the cofounders of wikipedia. It is like wikipedia but with peer review. From the citizendium essay.

    Imagine what is possible with tens of millions of intellectuals working together on educational and reference projects.

    The wrench in the whole thing is that wikipedia started as a dot com called nupedia with experts and peer review (sanger) . So wikipedia started where citizendium is trying to restart. From Larry Sanger, the cofounder of wikipedia, on slashdot.

    Wikipedia's predecessor, which I was also employed to organize, was Nupedia. Nupedia was to be a highly reliable, peer-reviewed resource that fully appreciated and employed the efforts of subject area experts, as well as the general public.

    Is this getting recursive to anyone else?

    Continue reading "Citizendium is to Foo as Wikipedia is to Bar" »

    February 07, 2006

    Knowledge versus Information Literacy

    "Knowledge is power, not   mere argument or ornament." - Francis Bacon (link)

    which of course begs the question of "how do you get knowledge"?  Which leads to:

    "Knowledge acquisition is the process of absorbing and storing new information in memory, the success of which is often gauged by how well the information can later be remembered, or retrieved from memory." - Danielle S. McNamara and Tenaha O’Reilly

    which is why this is a good idea.

    Exam measures students' 'information literacy'
    Friday, February 3, 2006; Posted: 9:38 a.m. EST (14:38 GMT)

    (AP) -- When it comes to downloading music and instant messaging, today's students are plenty tech-savvy. But that doesn't mean they know how to make good use of the endless stream of information that computers put at their fingertips.

    Educators and employers call those skills "technology literacy," and while everyone agrees it's important to have, it also is difficult to measure.

    Now a test that some high school students will begin taking this year could help.

    The ICT Literacy Assessment touches on traditional skills, such as analytical reading and math, but with a technological twist. Test-takers, for instance, may be asked to query a database, compose an e-mail based on their research, or seek information on the Internet and decide how reliable it is. (more)

    Intuitively we all know this already.  Ever watch someone who doesn't know how to construct a query in google?  It's almost painful to watch them typing and even more painful to watch them blame the application for the unexpected results.  Which is why we need to teach technology literacy. 

    On a side note, why doesn't CNN accept track backs?  Come on folks, join the conversation!