INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE. WE THOUGHT WE KNEW WHAT INFORMATION WAS.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Future of Information Lisa Sloniowski, Information Literacy Programme Coordinator York University Libraries.
Advertisements

| The 24 Hour Library – Increasing Your Database Use Presented by: Justine Shaffner Library Services Consultant - Public
Information in the Information Age. We thought we knew what information is.
Databases vs the Internet Coconino Community College Revised August 2010.
OCLC Online Computer Library Center Pattern recognition Lorcan Dempsey PALINET's 7th Annual OCLC Users Conference, May 28-30, 2003 Keynote presentation.
Tara Guthrie, 2012 Types of Resources: Electronic.
Web 2.0, the Open Access Movement, and Research Cycle Chem 300: Fall 2008.
Technological Advances in the Classroom By: Group 2 Linda Strahler Patrick Hayes Gina Meyer.
WISER History: Stay up-to-date with RSS feeds and eAlerts Isabel D. Holowaty, History Librarian.
Need to Know Now: Scholarly Communication Today Prof. Monica Berger, Library PDAC, NYC College of TechnologyMonica Berger Nov. 17, 2005.
Information Universe DIT Library Research Resources
Adjunct Academy presentation, part II: Eresources Prof. Monica Berger Oct. 27, 2006
Anne Bardolph Acquisitions Librarian FSU College of Law Research Center.
A Different Approach to Learning SAS ® Software. Different ways of learning Reading a book Taking the classes Work experience Seminars, workshops User.
E-journals: opportunities and challenges Bharati Banerjee.
The term web2.0 refers to the development of online services that encourage collaboration, communication and information sharing. CILIP Scotland
Destiny, Databases, & Digital Devices for Teachers Buy-Back Session November 10, 2008 Presenter: Stefani Williams, Librarian.
Information Literacy Adapted from a presentation by Anke Tonn Nicholls State University.
Why create a Gandhara What is it expected to do that the library catalog is not doing? What other benefits can it offer to users? Think of Gandhara as.
SUU CSIS 1000 Created by: Dave Barney, Semantic Discovery.
Learning Objectives Identify ways to validate health information from the internet Identify ways to effectively search the internet for health information.
Library Resources Mara Bordignon, B.Sc., M.I.St. Information Services Librarian York Library.
Literature in Theory & Practice Frederic Murray Assistant Professor MLIS, University of British Columbia BA, Political Science, University of Iowa Instructional.
Comprehensive user education to successfully navigate the Internet Part 1 - Introduction Course developed by University Library of Debrecen.
Swapan Deoghuria Scientist-II, Computer Centre Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science Kolkata , INDIA URL:
Final lecture: The future of scholarly communication, or what have we learned? Honors NJohn November 30, 2006.
WEB 2.O APPLICATIONS FOR SMALL BUSINESS IT255: Unit 3.
Rationale for Technology Integration: Why Use Technology? 1.10.
What Do Faculty Think of the Changing Environment? Kevin Guthrie Roger C. Schonfeld April 17, 2007.
The New Digital World and the Transformation of Information and Libraries Patricia L. Thibodeau Associate Dean Library Services & Archives Oct. 26, 2011.
Welcome to the section dedicated to electronic resources. Online Databases Online Articles.
Raising Awareness in Library 2.0 way: The UJ Sciences Librarian Virtual Experience SANLiC Workshop, 28 May 2009.
Internet Skills The World Wide Web (Web) consists of billions of interconnected pages of information from a wide variety of sources. In this section: Web.
Education and Info Lit Week 2 – Lecture B. Why are we having this conversation? People and their Lives Social and Historical Influences Current Conditions.
Collection directions ACCUL meeting, OCLC, March Lorcan Dempsey, VP Research, OCLC
The Read Write Web Chapter One Presentation By Shontae Dandridge October 20, 2011.
Web 2.0 By Martin King. Features of Web 2.0 Tags: These are one word descriptions of the entire content written by the owner. Extensions: It is software.
Finding Information Using Library Resources for ENG 102 Ning Zou :: Reference & Instruction Librarian.
Susan A. Mee Shirley L. Bower Rochester Institute of Technology Off-Campus Library Services Conference April 29, 2010.
Knowledge hub & outstanding service and expertise Leveraging innovative technologies to meet the information needs of Members of Parliament: Case study.
Using journals What is a journal? Why use them? How do I find good ones to use? How do I find locate them in the Library? What about referencing?
Starting your Research.
Library Services & Resources Rosalie Waller Information Services Librarian Newnham Campus March 2007.
The World of Global Communication. O We’ll going to talk about the the world’s global communication, like the Internet, the press, telephony (which developed.
A very Quick Guide to Finding E-Books, Journal Articles & Other E-Resources Leanne Young University Library Services Updated February 2013.
Quick Review of Basics NSUOCO New Residents Orientation October 2012.
 The simple answer is, of course, journalism as it is practiced online.  Journalism is any non-fiction or documentary narrative that reports or analyzes.
Notes from Computers in Libraries 2005 Many presentations online here: Many presentations online here:
Information Resources Libraries & the Open Web Frederic Murray Assistant Professor MLIS, University of British Columbia BA, Political Science, University.
Explore and exploit your e-collections don’t just make available Helle Lauridsen Market Manager, Europe Serials Solutions.
Interactivity in Blackboard Making your class something other than an electronic book.
A wiki is a collaborative web application which allows people to add and edit content using a browser… …it creates communities and empowers users as they.
World Wide Web cancho. World Wide Web System of hypertext documents accessed via Internet.
10 Best Uses of Internet in Teaching and Learning Jennifer Lassiter.
+ Publishing Your First Post USING WORDPRESS. + A CMS (content management system) is an application that allows you to publish, edit, modify, organize,
1 Information Science Overview n Representation of Information (Knowledge) n Storage of Information n Finding/Re-Finding Information n Exchange/Sharing.
Leveraging the Expertise of our Staff and the Information Resources We Manage MIT Libraries Visiting Committee April 13, 2005.
Donna Waters Felecia Wesley The Man with the visio n Tim Berners-Lee began the development of his vision of the World Wide Web in Before the creation.
© 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers. 1 Chapter 8 Exploring Electronic and Hard Copy Sources Technical Communication, 11 th.
Social Media & Social Networking 101 Canadian Society of Safety Engineering (CSSE)
Social Networking for Library and Information Science Literature John Meier Science Librarian The Pennsylvania State University University Libraries LFO.
Analytical Thinking For Technology (WUCT140) Library Skills Class Kristy Newton, Wollongong College Australia Librarian.
Terkko Online – Content, Tools and Services for the medical customer Jukka Englund HELSINKI UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Terkko – Meilahti Campus Library.
Databases vs the Internet
Little, big, and vast steps towards open education
Impact of the Alternative e-Publishing Model: From Open Access Resources & Self-Publishing toward Librarian’s New Challenges 溫達茂 飛資得資訊 中華民國九十三年十一月.
Library Web Portals: Reinventing Libraries for the Future
BLOOD DISORDER RESEARCH … using RHS Library Resources
Finding and Evaluation Information
Presentation transcript:

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE

WE THOUGHT WE KNEW WHAT INFORMATION WAS.

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE WE THOUGHT WE KNEW WHAT INFORMATION WAS. THEN ALONG CAME POSTMODERNISM

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE WE THOUGHT WE KNEW WHAT INFORMATION WAS. THEN ALONG CAME POSTMODERNISM ALONG CAME THE ELECTRONIC AGE

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE WE THOUGHT WE KNEW WHAT INFORMATION WAS. THEN ALONG CAME POSTMODERNISM ALONG CAME THE ELECTRONIC AGE ALONG CAME ALTERNATE FORMS OF PUBLICATION

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE NOW “INFORMATION” IS AN EXCEEDINGLY MIXED BAG

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE HOW DID WE GET HERE?

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE BEFORE THERE WAS PRINT:  INFORMATION WAS “TRADITIONAL”

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE BEFORE THERE WAS PRINT:  INFORMATION WAS “TRADITIONAL”  RELIABILITY OF INFORMATION WAS CRUCIAL

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE BEFORE THERE WAS PRINT:  INFORMATION WAS “TRADITIONAL”  RELIABILITY OF INFORMATION WAS CRUCIAL  UNAUTHORIZED CRITIQUE OF INFORMATION OR CREATION OF NEW KNOWLEDGE WAS DANGEROUS

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE BEFORE THERE WAS PRINT:  INFORMATION WAS “TRADITIONAL”  RELIABILITY OF INFORMATION WAS CRUCIAL  UNAUTHORIZED CRITIQUE OF INFORMATION OR CREATION OF NEW KNOWLEDGE WAS DANGEROUS  DEVELOPMENT OF NEW KNOWLEDGE WAS SLOW

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE READING AND WRITING :  KNOWLEDGE COULD BE PRESERVED IN PRINT

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE READING AND WRITING:  KNOWLEDGE COULD BE PRESERVED IN PRINT  PEOPLE COULD PAY MORE ATTENTION TO DISCOVERY

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE READING AND WRITING:  KNOWLEDGE COULD BE PRESERVED IN PRINT  PEOPLE COULD PAY MORE ATTENTION TO DISCOVERY  KEEPERS OF KNOWLEDGE WERE MORE ELITE THAN IN ORAL SOCIETIES

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE THE PRINTING PRESS:  MULTIPLE COPIES MADE INFORMATION MORE SECURE

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE THE PRINTING PRESS:  MULTIPLE COPIES MADE INFORMATION MORE SECURE  MORE PEOPLE COULD ACCESS THE KNOWLEDGE BASE

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE THE PRINTING PRESS:  MULTIPLE COPIES MADE INFORMATION MORE SECURE  MORE PEOPLE COULD ACCESS THE KNOWLEDGE BASE  ELITISM OF KNOWLEDGE KEEPERS WAS ATTACKED

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE THE PRINTING PRESS:  MULTIPLE COPIES MADE INFORMATION MORE SECURE  MORE PEOPLE COULD ACCESS THE KNOWLEDGE BASE  ELITISM OF KNOWLEDGE KEEPERS WAS ATTACKED  POSSIBILITY OF NEW DISCOVERY WAS MULTIPLIED

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE THE PRINTING PRESS:  MULTIPLE COPIES MADE INFORMATION MORE SECURE  MORE PEOPLE COULD ACCESS THE KNOWLEDGE BASE  ELITISM OF KNOWLEDGE KEEPERS WAS ATTACKED  POSSIBILITY OF NEW DISCOVERY WAS MULTIPLIED  SUBJECT DISCIPLINES ORGANIZED KNOWLEDGE

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE ENTER THE INTERNET:  GATEKEEPERS NO LONGER CRUCIAL; FREE SPEECH REIGNS

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE ENTER THE INTERNET:  GATEKEEPERS NO LONGER CRUCIAL; FREE SPEECH REIGNS  MORE ABILITY TO CREATE AND ACQUIRE INFORMATION THAN EVER BEFORE IN HUMAN HISTORY

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE ENTER THE INTERNET:  GATEKEEPERS NO LONGER CRUCIAL; FREE SPEECH REIGNS  MORE ABILITY TO CREATE AND ACQUIRE INFORMATION THAN EVER BEFORE IN HUMAN HISTORY  THE READERS BECOME THE GATEKEEPERS

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART BOOKS

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART BOOKS  TRADITIONAL PUBLISHING IS CONTINUING

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART BOOKS  TRADITIONAL PUBLISHING IS CONTINUING  E-BOOK PUBLISHING IS ADVANCING SLOWLY

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART BOOKS  TRADITIONAL PUBLISHING IS CONTINUING  E-BOOK PUBLISHING IS ADVANCING SLOWLY  PRINT-ON-DEMAND IS OPENING NEW OPPORTUNITIES

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART JOURNALS AND MAGAZINES

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART JOURNALS AND MAGAZINES  E-JOURNALS ARE DOMINATING; PRINT IS DYING

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART JOURNALS AND MAGAZINES  E-JOURNALS ARE DOMINATING; PRINT IS DYING  SCHOLARSHIP IS BEING MAINTAINED

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART JOURNALS AND MAGAZINES  E-JOURNALS ARE DOMINATING; PRINT IS DYING  SCHOLARSHIP IS BEING MAINTAINED  THE OPEN ACCESS MOVEMENT IS GROWING (

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART THE WORLD WIDE WEB

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART THE WORLD WIDE WEB  SEARCHING FOR A BETTER SEARCH ENGINE

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART THE WORLD WIDE WEB  SEARCHING FOR A BETTER SEARCH ENGINE  CATALOGING THE WEB?

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART THE WORLD WIDE WEB  SEARCHING FOR A BETTER SEARCH ENGINE  CATALOGING THE WEB?  BETTER INSTRUCTION FOR USERS

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART WEB 2.0  INCLUDES EVERYTHING ABOUT THE WWW THAT IS INTERACTIVE

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART WEB 2.0  INCLUDES EVERYTHING ABOUT THE WWW THAT IS INTERACTIVE  BLOGS, WIKIS, RSS FEEDS, FORUMS, , FACEBOOK, TWITTER, INSTAGRAM, SNAPCHAT, AND SO ON

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART WEB 2.0  INCLUDES EVERYTHING ABOUT THE WWW THAT IS INTERACTIVE  BLOGS, WIKIS, RSS FEEDS, FORUMS, , FACEBOOK, TWITTER, INSTAGRAM, SNAPCHAT, AND SO ON  DOES SOCIAL INTERACTION LEAD TO BETTER INFORMATION?

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART NOT ALL INFORMATION IS INFORMATIVE

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART NOT ALL INFORMATION IS INFORMATIVE  INFORMATION NEEDS TO “INFORM.”

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART NOT ALL INFORMATION IS INFORMATIVE  INFORMATION NEEDS TO “INFORM.”  AS GATEKEEPING DIMINISHES THERE IS MORE FREEDOM BUT MORE RESPONSIBILITY AS WELL

INFORMATION IN THE INFORMATION AGE INFORMATION TODAY: THE STATE OF THE ART NOT ALL INFORMATION IS INFORMATIVE  INFORMATION NEEDS TO “INFORM.”  AS GATEKEEPING DIMINISHES THERE IS MORE FREEDOM BUT MORE RESPONSIBILITY AS WELL  DO YOU HAVE THE SKILLS TO EVALUATE THE INFORMATION YOU USE?