Monday, June 30, 2008

thing #15 - Web 2.0, Library 2.0

After reading all of the articles I've decided to respond to "Away from the "icebergs." Although I must say that several of the articles truly stirred my librarian emotion.

I agree with Mr. Anderson that librarians have been heroically rowing the library boat, even at times when it felt like bailing might be a more appropriate response. I disagree with Mr. Anderson in his comment that librarians/libraries are not paying enough attention to potential disasters, "just in case" collection, user education, "come to us" library service. I would like to believe/hope that many libraries/librarians are working hard to keep up with the challenges that Web 2.0/Library 2.0 have brought to us. Isn't challenge and change supposed to be positive?

The "just in case"collection has been morphing to meet the current demands however grudgingly and possibly a bit slower than hoped for. Attitudes of librarians have had to change regarding collection development and will need to continue to be open to change as we move further into Web 2.0/Library 2.0. What I'm not seeing change are the attitudes of teachers. Many/most are not familiar with nor have a desire to become familiar with Web 2.0/Library 2.0 offerings and demands. Until curriculum is written to include these there will not be a change.

Libraries have been poorly equipped and insufficiently staffed for teaching forever. The cry has been going out for more staffing for years but continues to fall on deaf ears. However, librarians have not thrown in the towel due to the short fall of staffing. We continue to find ways to do more with less. Not a perfect world or solution but we have to work with what we've got. I disagree that we need to move away from teaching research skills and move to nothing but succinct information delivery. Our patrons need and deserve both. How will we do it with our current constraints, I'm not sure but as in the past we will continue to strive for the best for our patrons by educating them and delivering to them the best that we have.

The "come to us" model has been in jeopardy for a few years as we are forced to deliver information via the web. But why must we be forced? Rather we should be more than excited to jump on the Web2.0/Library 2.0 bandwagon. We must meet users where they are rather than expecting them to come to us.

No profession can survive if it does not conform/morph/shift to meet the fundamental changes and demands of its changing community. Our information world is changing rapidly and libraries must change right along with the rest of the world if we wish to survive.

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Thing #14 - Technorati

Tecnorati, the great blog warehouse. I completed keyword searches, tag searches, blog post searches, can't remember blog directory searching but I'm sure I must have done it. Keyword search returned blogs with one or more of the keywords so many of the articles didn't exactly fit the search results desired. Blog posts results were very similar to keyword search but seemed a little more to the point. Tag searches revealed somewhat the same results but I found several blogs that no longer existed and many were blocked by me filter.

I liked the arrangement/management of the Blogger Central/What's Popular, helped categorize the voluminous number of blogs in a way that made them "seem" more manageable. I liked that they provided Popular Blogs by fans and Popular Blogs by authority. Found the most popular search tags interesting. Sort of gives us an idea what the majority are looking for and that I'm not generally in that group.

I'm not sure that Technorati is a tool I will use professionally. I've not ruled it out completely but I really need to dig deeper into its offerings. I do appreciate the tagging feature and feel there are great benefits for the consumer. However, I do feel some of the more commercial type blogs are going overboard with the number of tags they add. I realize the idea is for readers to find them but come on, 26 or more tags is ridiculous. When tagging for my own interests I try to keep my tags limited to the very obvious and necessary tags. That makes it easier for me to find what I want and cuts down on the proliferation of tags.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Thing #13 - Social Bookmarking

After digging through the three social bookmarking sites I decided to stick with del.cio.us as it seemed to be fairly intuitive and user friendly. The site itself was well organized, not too cluttered. I quickly added a large number of sites and tags with literally no effort. Furl looked interesting also, liked the highlight text feature and the choice of private or public page by page. I felt their page was a big cluttered or messy. Ma.gnolia was more of the same but had extra components that I wasn't interested in.

I feel this can be a good tool for teachers/librarians to use with their research classes. However, I still have questions about what it takes for students to access my tags in del.cio.us. I will explore this further. As for personal use it is excellent. I love that I can pile in all my desired sites and access them from anywhere.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Thing #12.3

I must say I enjoyed this part of the activity immensely. I located a stain glass site that is superb and will hopefully get me back into the art of stain glass creation. About two years ago we moved my mother-in-law into our home, so I located a site on home care for the elderly. I found it to be quite informative. My attitude towards searching out blogs of interest has now improved greatly.

Thing #12.2

Okay, this was a stretching exercise for me. I find I'd rather lurk than write only because I feel I do not have anything to add that's truly valuable. However, as I venture to comment on two outside blogs I hopefully will find blogs that will inspire me to speak up.

Thing #12.1 - Important Points About Commenting

Be polite, be polite, be polite, I truly cannot tolerate people that are rude in conversation whatever the mode of delivery. I've witnessed horrendous comments on listservs and blogs to well meaning individuals and rudeness from the same individuals when politely asked to correct their behavior. I read the final post of a blogger just the other day due to the rudeness of some participants. She decided it best to close her blog, how sad.

Contributing something of worth to a blog/conversation seems obvious to me however I find many folks just like to talk. Think before you speak/blog adding value rather than just words on a page.

Thing #11 - LibraryThing

Quick, simple, user friendly site. Adding books to my account was a snap. I poked around in some of the groups finding the "Librarians who LibraryThing" and "Crime, Thriller, and Mystery" interesting. I didn't join either group yet but truly enjoyed the posts. I will probably join both groups. Will add the site to my blog list...as soon as I can get it all working again. Had to use a different computer today and find it incredibly slowwwwww. Frustration beginning to rise to the top.

Monday, June 23, 2008

Thing #10 - Image Generators







What fun! What fun! I could spend hours playing and creating new images. Could get addicting. My favorite sites are Image Chef http://www.imagechef.com/ and BigHugeLabs http://bighugelabs.com/flickr/.
I must say I ran into several walls as I wandered through the Image Generator maze. Several of the suggested sites would not open for me (bummer) and some would not actually create the image once I plugged in the needed information (frustration plus.) They would just send you to another site requesting you to sign-up for their service, not interested. Once I located friendly sites I really got into creating new pics. However, I'm definitely lacking on the creativity side.
Hopefully I can create a tasteful image or two for my blog, school website, communications to staff, ummm I'm sure other ideas will pop into my head as I play.




Thing #9 - Bogs & RSS

The easiest way for me to find feeds or Blogs was to glean them from blogs of others with which I share an interest. I found that the legends in the field have already done their homework so why not copy, right? I did search on my own however and found it rather time consuming. Google Blog Search was an okay tool but did not hone in on the topic as well as I would have liked (maybe it was the searcher????) I cannot get into School Library Blogs on Suprglu which greatly disappointed me as that is the one I was most interested. Bloglines was useful and easy to use.

I located two library specific blogs that I'm anxious to spend more time delving into the archives. I hope to spend more time located additional blogs/feeds with an elementary school library focus. I also shall begin looking for techno blogs/feeds on my next search round. Amazing how many blogs there are which adds to the difficulty in located the useful ones. I dabbled in a couple of other tools but didn't pay attention to them as they weren't particularly useful to me.

Once again so much to dig through to locate the pertinent items of interest.

Friday, June 20, 2008

Thing #8 - RSS

RSS is simple to set-up fortunately. However, I do feel that even though it is touted as being a time saver I'm not sure I have the time to devote to using Google Reader. I guess a quick glance at lunch might be a possibility however there is not time during my professional day that allows for that type of activity.

I would like to take more time (oops the "T" word again) to explore blogs that I would definitely find useful to my profession. I'm not saying that the ones I selected aren't useful to me, its just that I've not yet taken time to dig through the ones I selected to see if they are relevant to me. They all look very interesting!!! Hopefully after perusing my selected blogs I will find tidbits that will be useful.

Not sure how my library can use RSS but I do see if could be useful in high schools and public libraries to deliver up to the minute news information.

Thing #7 - Google Offerings

After delving into the Google playground I found that I don't see a huge usage for me as an educator of elementary students but see many applications for educators of older students. I am giving Google Alerts a try using "Severe Weather" as my topic, can't wait to see if I'll like it.

Google Notebook was quite interesting and I can see very valuable to high school and possibly middle school students for collecting their research notes. I am tempted to try it with my 5th graders for a small research project just to see if they can handle it. I see copyright/plagiarism becoming an issue for many students, especially younger ones fighting the copy/paste temptation.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Thing #6 - Flickr & More....Toys of Course

Oh my, oh my, I have found so many fun and useful tools in the Big Huge Labs toy bend. I've had so much fun!!! I'm really sold on the trading card and the magazine cover. My mind is swirling with ideas applicable to research projects and their final products. I'm hoping to hook my 3rd, 4th, and 5th grade teachers into using this tool with their students. I just can't express how excited I am about this toybox.

I'm picturing biography research with a magazine cover as the final presentation, attached to the teacher's website.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Thing #5 - FLICKR


Wow! What an awesome resource. Once again I would like to take more time to play and explore the offerings of the site. I can see that FLICKR could be very useful in an educational setting. Can't wait to introduce this resource to my teachers with an emphasis on copyright rules for sure.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Thing 3 Blog Process

Setting up the blog was a bit of a challenge for me. I am using a school student computer to complete this project which is not particularly fast. My patience has worn thin as I've had to stop and start over a couple of time because the programs would freeze. I will use my teacher computer next time which is much faster and should take out a lot of the aggravation out of the process.

I enjoyed creating the Avatar however would like more time to play. Truly, there is never enough time to play with all the components. I'm hoping to make more time for playing!!!

I now have so many passwords I can't remember which goes with which account.

Thing 2

The easiest habit for me is "Begin with the end in mind." That tends to be how I approach most issues both personal and work related. The most difficult habit for me is Habit 4 "Have confidence in yourself as a competent effective learner." I have high expectations for myself and yet don't have confidence that I will achieve the level of learning I desire even though I am relentless at achieving my goals.