When the discussion turns to technology and librarianship, many of
the professors I studied with used words like exciting and thrilling. In
my two and half years studying at San Jose State University, I used
Blackboard Instant Messenger, Elluminate, Desire 2 Learn, Angel, Second
Life, Google Docs, ePortfolio and iCloud. I created a blog in Wordpress
and Blogger. While teaching online courses at California State
University, Long Beach, I used Blackboard. The former head librarian at
the school where I work had each one of the campus’ library coordinators
spend one hour a week manning the Meebo chat (which, sadly, is gone)
and Portal. At the beginning of the new year, I will be one of the
content editors of the school’s online classes in MoodleRooms. Also, I often
check the RSS feeds from San Jose State’s SLIS, create and maintain
Facebook pages, add photos to Instagram and Tumblr, and, on the rarest
of occasions, check my band’s myspace and Fbook page. Exciting and thrilling,
sure. Overwhelming? Definitely. I do not Pinterest or “tweet,” because
with social media and all of its relatives I have to pick and choose
which suit me best.
Annette Lamb’s article Sensible Approaches to Technology for Teaching, Learning and Leadership (2011)
stresses that we (librarians) need to avoid getting caught up in
technology. Her “sensible approach” is to connect, communicate, and
collaborate with tools that befit you and your patrons. In Lamb’s
article she offers specific technology tools to use like Webspiration,
titanpad, and todaysmeet that she thinks are good for the teacher
librarian. These tools are helpful for a certain kind of profession
(teacher librarian). The notion of finding a good social media,
planning, or whatever electronic needs that work for the librarian or
user, rather than using them all, is a good mantra to follow.
Keeping that in mind, though all of the technology tools are
important, one must remember that technology is not the answer to all
the questions. In a Shenandoah University study of students’ opinions
and usage of social media, technology and library research, a majority
of the students did not use wikis, blogs, or podcasts for their
research, but found that emailed interlibrary loans were essential
(Baggett & Williams, 2012, p.21). The public library by my house has
a Facebook page that offers more information than does their website.
The ebb and flow of each library is unique and the technology they
choose will have some trial and error to it.
Excellent post, at SFUSD we're struggling to keep up with sporadic funding tsunami's that overwhelm educators with a half dozen new tech-centric tools every semester. Without appropriate development and thoughtful planning classroom teachers are often left in a 'tech pit' of buttons and gadgets they are neither engaged in or have time to leverage in a meaningful way during class time.
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