01/06/2013

Guiding Students Through the Maelstrom in a Library

To hear the University of Manitoba no longer offers a master in library education is maybe not all that surprising if you look around schools today.  There are few librarians left and learning how to use the Dewey Decimal System and the card catalog might not be seen as relevant to learning in today's world.  What seems more surprising to me is that there has been no replacement or metamorphose of the librarian into a media specialist.  At one time there was some importance placed upon the expertise of a librarian as a person who held a specific and important set of knowledge and skills.  To think now that in today's information overloaded society that there should not be a specialist in schools with skills relating to research, searching skills, media and online ethics and responsibilities, and how to judge the information that is so abundant and available seems almost irresponsible to me.  I think this may be another example of how the speed of technology can blur the thinking of the education system.  It is like teachers and students are traveling on a high speed train and beside them only a few feet from the tracks is the billboard extolling the benefit and wonders of technology.  Everyone knows it there is a message on the billboards, but the train is moving to fast to make sense of it.  

Some people said the library is a dying place because in the online world there is no need to have a central location for information and knowledge.  This view doesn't take into account that the internet can be a lonely and misleading place.  In our world of information overload I think a library or gathering place is more important than ever.  It may create a place of sober second thought (Sir John A. Macdonald's not Mike Duffy's) for people publishing content on the internet as well a place to collaborate and share ideas and knowledge.  There is no way for one person to get a handle on technology and information and use it effectively in an isolated setting.  I think libraries should and may go through a resurgence if educators stop and think about the possibilities. 



"... Nature becomes a gigantic gasoline station, an energy source for modern technology and industry."

Heidegger has touched on a nerve for me with the above quote.  This attitude that everything can be used as a resource or monetized has changed the way we view our world and how we treat it.  Everyone is well aware of the damage being done to our planet by our ravenous appetite for resources.  Richard Sennett states, "...one million, for instance, represents the number of years Nature took to create the amount of fossil fuel now consumed in a single year."   It is obvious that something and everything needs to change.  I recently attended a Sustainable Energy Conference where a speaker spoke of the "silver bullet" that everyone thinks technology will provide and will save the world without us having to give up our current conveniences and comforts.  When I had sometime to reflect on that statement I came to the conclusion that we must all believe in the "silver bullet" or we would all be doing a lot more.  Our blind faith in technology will only lead to self destruction unless we can change our assumptions and and find a way to open our eyes to the essence of technology.

The person I heard speaking did not believe or have any hope that the silver bullet will ever exist.  


iPads in St. James

My biggest question that was not addressed in the CBC and Winnipeg Free Press articles that I read is, What sort of training are the teachers getting about using iPads?  They told parents to to monitor students on their iPads at home and to set up the iPads with accounts.  I hope there are opportunities for parent training sessions as well.

As a teacher I would be quite excited about a program like this but I wonder if the technology will  be introduced before the knowledge how to use effectively is in place.

I wonder if Denis' dysfunctional model of technology innovation may be relevant in June 2014?  Lets hope not.

EXTRAVAGANT CLAIMS, MASS PURCHASING, NON-TRAINING, MISUSE, NON-USE, REJECTION

2 comments:

  1. There are a lot of things that are interesting in Heidegger's quotes and thoughts we went over in last class, and the resource depleting technologies have been going forth from Heidegger's time with a vengeance and the machine just won't stop, until it's all gone and the whole world is just a smoldering wasteland,... mind I don't think its global warming rather global cooling after this years' weather so far!
    I do agree that we need to embrace technology to a point and still have the ability to walk away from it when we want to, but I think that that is asking way too much, like asking a kid to just walk by the candy store with out looking or taking....an impossible task.... our dependence and could I say addiction to technology makes Heidegger's point mute, technology has ran way out of our range to be in control of and as McLuhan pointed out is in the process of reshaping humanity as a whole, something that I think we just won't like or be ready for....

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  2. A great post Gavin! I am intrigued by your suggestion to replace the librariran with a media specialist in our schools. MTS should conduct a survey of all teachers to investigate the level of confidence Manitoba teachers have in implementing technology, safely, into our classrooms.
    Heidegger's notion of nature as a resource for modern technology is alarming - but as we can see, also unstopable. I had a feeling that Heidegger is urging us to think of nature, try to be in tune with it as we engage in resourcing modern technology. I am affraid that the underlying culprit is the one and only "true and acceptable" way of thinking - the quest towards efficiency. We seem to be justifying anything in the name of efficiency, which usually goes hand in hand with profits. Have we lost our way? have we reached a breaking point?

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