Thursday, June 30, 2005

Teleseminars

It is so good to have finally set up the teleseminars I have been planning for months. Not so difficult really, but I do enjoy sharing the information that will make things easier for people. The current one is listed here, and the total schedule goes up on my website tonight.

Thursday, June 23, 2005

Brain candy

This is an interesting take on the "video games and TV versus reading," and "we're all going down the tube with our lowest common denominator popular culture" issue. I blogged about it on liblog recently, quoting an article in the SLAQ serial "Access." Now I've discovered a book review in the New Yorker by Malcolm Gladwell. The book is “Everything Bad Is Good for You” (Riverhead; $23.95), by Steven Johnson. The point is made that our IQ is rising, despite our wallowing in popular culture, and Johnson claims that television and games require much more brain work and a different understanding. Gladwell remarks ...

"The point is that books and video games represent two very different kinds of learning. When you read a biology textbook, the content of what you read is what matters. Reading is a form of explicit learning. When you play a video game, the value is in how it makes you think. Video games are an example of collateral learning, which is no less important.

Being “smart” involves facility in both kinds of thinking—the kind of fluid problem solving that matters in things like video games and I.Q. tests, but also the kind of crystallized knowledge that comes from explicit learning."

Might I extend this to the fact that many different forms of literacy and thinking require different types of thinking, different genres or disciplines? And as we remarked in Liblog, they are all aspects of literacy.

Monday, June 20, 2005

Bytes

I am fascinated with the word bites/bytes/bights. It is my word of the month. We all know how strange English can be. And those of us outside the United States are constantly aware of the changes to our English caused by their pervasive influence. I know that my packaged food is light in fat, but lite seems to be creeping in to the packaging. And comforting pictures of security for little children are accompanied with more shortenings. Are they really nite-lites? So how do you spell the thing you do with your teeth? Bight - bite? We have a national geographical feature called the Great Australian Bight. I'm confused.

But I do like plays on words and spelling. So we now add bytes into the mix, and my fascination with what we can do with information and email and websites has found a name. I have "news bytes" for Librarians, for education and for my friends. And what can I call my site for Librarians? - of course - The Librarian Bytes!! Too sexy for librarians!! Not this one, and what a wonderful pun!!

Wednesday, June 15, 2005

Learning to search

Malcolm Gladwell has written a book called Blink in which he discusses how we make decisions intuitively, often in a split second, and suggests that these are the ones that are more likely to be successful than the ones we mull over for ages.

I like the implications involved in that idea. Did we always make decisions that way? when life was lived at a slower simpler pace? (Do I have the right to call that pace slow and simple?) And are they really better decisions - the ones we make on the fly?

What I do want to look at, though,is the response to the book by Gord Hotchkiss writing for Search insider. He relates this decision-making process to our use of internet search. Most people surveyed could not articulate why or how they made the decisions they did when searching the internet.

I want to apply this to children (and possibly anyone learning search at any time). Surely many of the decisions we make are based on what we have learned through experience. It is time to direct children, and many Librarians and Teacher Librariana are doing just that. But it seems that many are left to learn by trial and error, using their valuable education time. This seems such a waste. If they are to use the internet in their education, then they need to learn more quickly and accurately. They need to be shown how to evaluate the material presented by search engines and owners of sites. They need to make conscious decisions, based on strategies we can teach them. Then those conscious decisions can become the "intuition" that guides them in later years. I do believe that intuition is much like conscience, an amount innate, but, to a greater degree, learned behaviour.

The strategies have to be similar to those we teach in paper-based research. We exhort not to judge a book by its cover ... then we must teach how to judge a search result, just as well.

Saturday, June 11, 2005

Teleseminar - overcoming fear of public speaking

I have been busy preparing for a teleseminar to present on behalf of Communicators Logan City.It has been a steep learning curve to research and implement the best ways for the club to host this teleseminar and to receive payment. We are, after all, a non-profit organisation, not a business. But all is now in place, and I have pulled together a wide range of srategies to share - most have worked for me or for people I know and others I can offer, because everyone has their own way of coping with challenges. See you Tuesday evening.

Saturday, June 04, 2005

Passion in the Library

I visited a local library yesterday to set up a display for my ITC Club, Mt Gravatt Communicators. Garden City is a nearby suburb with a large shopping complex, including this library. I work in a school library, and I always find it exciting to visit the public libraries. I'm assailed with fascinating promises. There are so many programmes for so many interests. "Nite owls" caught my eye, mainly because of the interests at the school - promising "Activities on the internet based around the popular book 'A series of Unfortunate events' by Lemony Snickett. Ideal for children 8-12 years old." And the other is the programme by Brisbane City Council Libraries (of which Garden City is one) to have everyone in the city read and share this one book. It beckoned from their website every time I visited there as well, although One Book, One Brisbane has now been overtaken by an amnesty on fines. Great promotion. And now I have a home to promote my other passion as well. And given the atmosphere in the library, we're bound to attract some interest.