July 2008 Archives

I have written before about my inability to love Twitter.  I know it's easy for some, just not for me.  I'm still trying---I even made my feed public in an effort to embrace the whole experience.

I still don't like Twitter.  To me is a walled garden filled with the daily intricacies of the lives of other people.  I know, I know, it isn't a walled garden-- it is a dynamic, open environment where users share links, information and more.  Yes, it is a walled garden.  That guy was wrong.   Its' social environment neatly captures and in some respects, almost fully reproduces the atmospheres of older, enclosed online places, like BBS systems.  Once you've been on Twitter a bit, you realize that it really isn't (for most users, at least) about the microblogging.  It's about the @posts--the posts written in response to other Twitter users.  It's about the user's personal Twitter community.

Almost twenty years ago I followed ISCABBS--a nice walled garden encased in a telnet-based BBS system.  Everyone on there had aliases.  Sound familiar?  (Mine was Nubbin--named after the snack food chronicled in Henry Alford's Municipal Bondage, if you must know.)  Most of the people on there knew each other--it was a primarily local network. (Also sound familiar?)  Even though I lived in the same town, I didn't know anyone on ISCABBS.  It was interesting to me.

I lurked on ISCABBS.  It was hard to post on there myself.  After reading Disruptive Conversation's post on walled gardens, I realized that I have an old problem in a new environment.  What was ISCABBS, The Well, Xcaliber, Compuserve, AOL, et al (loved that Virginia Heffernan article on Xcaliber) is now Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, etc...  Walled gardens once ruled the Internets, were broken down, and are here once again  Twitter may not be a walled garden in that its data is available to users outside of Twitter (most specifically, on Google).  Twitter's community intelligence and social benefits, however, resemble those found in contained online environments.   I now know it isn't just Twitter--I have felt this way almost twenty years.  Boy, do I feel older than ever.

I have been trying to make myself embrace Twitter because "it's changing how people communicate."  It's "the next big thing." (Are students using it?  My impression:  not so much.)  The truth, of course, is what's old is new again.

ALA 2008

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I mentioned earlier that I was in Anaheim for ALA.  That was back at the end of June, and now it's mid-July--it's been a busy month so far!

For those who asked why I wasn't recapping ALA (coughericcough), here's a very brief recap of what I did at ALA.

I worked with the EBSS Teacher Education Committee on their in-process information literacy standards for Teacher Ed.  This Committee is doing amazing work, and I am excited to be a part of the process.

I shared a brief white paper recommending that the ACRL Information Literacy standards (if revised, which I sure hope they will be) link sequentially with relevant K-12 information literacy standards, including the AASL Learning Standards and ISTE NETS-S.  (If you'd like to see the white paper, just let me know.  It's still in process, and I'd love feedback.)

I attended Anne and Beth (and Emily, in absentia)'s discussion group on Information Literacy and the Social Web.  They did a great job with a fascinating topic.  Lots of people were interested in talking about the social web---over 150 in attendance!

And I ate at a lot of bad places and made my annual pilgrimage to see Harriet Ziefert, author of 1001 children's books, of course!