Archive for January, 2007

divine friendship & sonnet 30

Posted by Paul Roberts on January 21st, 2007

I’ve been thinking much lately about the gift of friendship and God’s purposes in it. Community. Accountability. Encouragement. I’ve been thinking about David and Jonathon. Paul and Timothy. Ridley and Latimer. Inevitably, thinking on friendship will lead to reminiscence and, at least for me, reminiscence will lead to sadness and even regret. We reminisce about that which is no longer.

But then I remembered this poem — the first poem I ever memorized — by Bill the bard.

Sonnet XXX by William Shakespeare

When to the sessions of sweet silent thought
I summon up remembrance of things past,
I sigh the lack of many a thing I sought,
And with old woes new wail my dear time’s waste:
Then can I drown an eye, unused to flow,
For precious friends hid in death’s dateless night,
And weep afresh love’s long since cancell’d woe,
And moan the expense of many a vanish’d sight:
Then can I grieve at grievances foregone,
And heavily from woe to woe tell o’er
The sad account of fore-bemoaned moan,
Which I new pay as if not paid before.
But if the while I think on thee, dear friend,
All losses are restored and sorrows end.

It’s amazing what can be wrought in our lives by such friends.

So then I think of Abraham, “the friend of God,” who undoubtedly left behind friends when he was called by God to a disposition of faith and to embark on a journey to a land which God had not yet identified. Had I been called to sacrifice my son as Abraham was called, my journey up the mountain would be filled with regret at all that I did wrong as a father. Could it be that the thought of friendship with God was enough to restore the losses and end the sorrows? James 2:23

Popularity: 32% [?]

social bookmarking & academic research

Posted by Paul Roberts on January 16th, 2007

I’ve been using Diigo and its less sophisticated cousin, del.icio.us, for quite some time now but I have hesitated to post about the benefits of social bookmarking sites for academic research since so much of what one finds online lacks authority and objectivity.

After reading “Social Bookmarking, Folksonomies, and Web 2.0 Tools” [Laura Gordon-Murnane, Searcher: The Magazine for Database Professionals 14:8 (June 2006) 26-38], however, I feel as though I should offer my two cents.

Making the Move

I began using del.icio.us after Internet Explorer lost all my bookmarks. The primary benefit of online bookmarking for me, then, was initially one of convenience: I could retrieve my bookmarks from any computer with internet access while retaining the ease of marking sites from within my browser. I also switched from Internet Explorer to FireFox (if you don’t use FireFox as your internet browser, you should — for too many reasons to list here), which is a vast improvement over IE.

Shortly afterward, I discovered Diigo. Not as many people use Diigo, but for those of you who blog or prefer prefer to read page annotations from other viewers it is an improvement over del.icio.us — plus it will import and update your del.icio.us bookmarks even if you use Diigo almost exclusively. For personal surfing and blogging purposes, Diigo is the best choice. However, because more people use del.icio.us, it is still to be preferred for research purposes. I will expound on this a little more in a minute.

Tag - You’re It: the Genius of “Tagging”

Tagging is a type of “folksonomy.” In other words, it enables you to categorize content (web pages, pictures, etc…) by whatever labels are most meaningful and helpful to YOU. Look at my del.icio.us bookmarks, for example (click here) and notice how you can access my bookmarks the old-fashioned way as a plain list or by the “tags” on the right side of the screen. Clicking on a tag, such as “art,” and you will see the website I have bookmarked and labeled as “art.”

You are probably accustomed to navigating sites by top-down taxonomy. At your local bookstore, for example, you can browse their books by category. Religion, fiction, biography, etc… The user must learn to navigate the store’s schema according to THEIR categories (taxonomy). Tagging is a form of folksonomy, which means that the user (or a community of users) can generate their own schema using terms that are most helpful to them. It is a bottom-up method.

This is helpful to me since it makes my bookmarks more accessible. I can tag a website with as many terms as I like. I might tag this CommonPlaces blog as blogs, theology, art, literature, library_stuff, research, or even as “colossal_waste_of_time.”

But this is also helpful to helpful to every other del.icio.us user. This is the beauty of it all. They become not just your tagged bookmarks, but the entire del.icio.us community’s tagged bookmarks (unless, of course, you choose the option to keep a particular bookmark private and unviewable by the public). You can search the tag “art” and see every bookmark tagged as “art” by anyone else. Tired of scrolling through six million results from an average Google search? Try searching the del.icio.us tagged bookmarks to see which ones other people have selected as the most important and/or helpful.

Remember: If you are using del.icio.us or Diigo just to save your bookmarks, then choose either. But if you are intending to search other people’s tags, then choose del.icio.us since it has a vastly larger number of users.

Social Bookmarking and Online Research

I will sing the praises of social bookmarking and folksonomy all day long. But as a research librarian I have mixed feelings about promoting their use in an academic setting. Most students understand that Wikipedia is not an authoritative source, but many still cite it in their papers. It may be an accurate reflection of users’ understanding of a topic, but it is not an academic encyclopedia. If students can’t discern between appropriate academic sources and helpful but academically inappropriate sites like Wikipedia, to what extent do I promote the similar world of social bookmarking?

Using tools like del.icio.us or its many cousins (see the list at the bottom of this post) are certainly helpful for finding information, but discernment must be central to how one reads, believes, and uses this information. It should go without saying that just because someone has taken the time to put it on the internet, and someone else has deemed it valuable enough to bookmark and tag for future reference, it is not necessarily correct, authoritative, and appropriate for academic use.

When to Use Social Bookmarking Sites for Research

I will be teaching incoming doctoral students about research next week. More specifically, I will be teaching them about doing academic research in our library based on Thomas Mann’s Oxford Guide to Library Research: How to Find Reliable Information Online and Offline (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005). Click here for the Table of Contents to see some of what we will cover.

My assumption is that these students are willing to put forward the time and energy to do substantive research rather than to piggy-back the often mediocre work that another person has done and published on the internet. When all the steps for effective library research outlined in Mann’s book, including the use of online academic databases through the library, are exhausted and the resulting leads are digested, or in the unlikely case that no leads are unearthed, only then will I refer a student to general online searching — and even then it is for the purpose of unearthing resources which the student still needs to evaluate in terms of authority, accuracy, objectivity, currency, and coverage — and even then I desire to equip them with knowledge of particular search tools and strategies. “Googling it” is not an effective search strategy, but it the only thing most people know to do.

So here is my question: do I reserve such instruction until they hit a dead end or do I recognized that human hearts are lazy (mine included) and that they will be searching the internet at large anyway, so I may as well equip them with effective search skills from the beginning? Studies show that most searchers go to Google, search for one or two keywords, and look at the first page of results from tens of thousands. There are wonderful shortcuts to finding materials on the internet (and, yes, even through Google — i.e., the Advanced Google book Search, or Google Scholar, both of which I use daily for citation searching) including social bookmarking sites. Using these can render the internet a useful tool.

So the question of when to use social bookmarking sites in the course of academic research is really one of information competence. I find that most students are one of three types:

  • The technologically challenged student who has just realized the world has passed them by: he/she was not expecting to find computers in the library and is utterly aghast that the library is unusable and their degree virtually unattainable without good computer knowledge and search skills. They are overwhelmed, desperate, and discouraged.
  • The relatively internet savvy student who has no idea of academic library research: he/she has a MySpace account, reads blogs, uses text messaging as a primary means of communication, but has absolutely no clue about how to do research. He may know a few Google tricks, but is not aware of the more helpful tools for targeting information on the internet.
  • The information competent student who can intelligently navigate and discern library resources as well as internet resources: he/she understands the value of authoritative resources, knows how to locate them using in-house library tools (both print and online) and by using in specific internet resources using mature discernment in their evaluation.

Social bookmarking sites should therefore be used to accomplish different goals depending on the student. For the first category of student, social bookmarking sites should be used to learn basic computer and internet skills. For example, as the student finds websites deemed helpful for any purpose (weather, news, tracking golf handicaps, etc…) he is more likely to return to those sites if the site is bookmarked and tagged for future reference. For the second category of student, deciding on appropriate tags for a page helps the student discern what may be important or unique about that page’s content. They are moving toward information competence. Both of the first two categories of students should use social bookmarking for personal rather than academic purposes. Only the third category, those students who have already achieved a fair measure of information competence should be encouraged to use social bookmarking services for academic purposes — and even then it is merely to discover additional threads of information sources.

Links to Popular Social Bookmarking Sites

Popularity: 66% [?]

librarians: proud, majestic, and fierce enough?

Posted by Paul Roberts on January 12th, 2007

Watch this.

Popularity: 23% [?]

“an atm for books”

Posted by Paul Roberts on January 11th, 2007

From the Fortune Small Business Magazine:

With the introduction of the Espresso, buying a book could become as easy as buying a pack of gum. After several years in development, the Espresso - a $50,000 vending machine with a conceivably infinite library - is nearly consumer-ready and will debut in ten to 25 libraries and bookstores in 2007.

The New York Public Library is scheduled to receive its machine in February. The company behind the Espresso is called On Demand Books, founded by legendary book editor Jason Epstein, 78, and Dane Neller, 56, but the technology was developed six years ago by Jeff Marsh, who is a technology advisor for New York City-based On Demand Books.

The machine can print, align, mill, glue and bind two books simultaneously in less than seven minutes, including full-color laminated covers. It prints in any language and will even accommodate right-to-left texts by putting the spine on the right. The upper page limit is 550 pages, though future versions of the machine will accommodate longer works with fewer hassles. Prices for the finished product will vary depending on locations, but the production cost is about a penny per page. Some 2.5 million books are now available - about one million in English and no longer under copyright protection. On Demand accesses the volumes through Google and the Open Content Alliance, among other sources. Neller predicts that within about five years On Demand Books will be able to reproduce every volume ever printed.

See the full article.

What does this mean for online bookstores like Amazon.com?

Popularity: 23% [?]

commonplacing

Posted by Paul Roberts on January 9th, 2007

Sorry for the lapse in posting. I’ve been redesigning my other site, and with the holidays and all…

I have unusual books to highlight - all of which are new acquisitions in our library and are intended to help improve our weak art history holdings. Why does a theological library want to acquire works on the history of art? Well, because they serve as a visual representation of church history and even historical theology and biblical interpretation.


Tiepolo

Adelheid M. Gealt and George Knox. Domenico Tiepolo: A New Testament. Bloomington: Indiana University Art Museum and Indiana University Press, 2006.
This is the first collected presentation of 313 drawings of scenes from the New Testament by 18th Century Venetian artist Domenico Tiepolo (1727-1804). When Domenico died, the drawings were dispersed among various purchasers. The authors have hunted them down and collected them for us here. This book will accompany an exhibition of many of the original drawings at The Frisk Collection in New York.



Alessandro Scafi. Mapping Paradise: A History of Heaven on Earth. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006.
The first book to show how heaven has been expressed in cartographical form throughout the last 2000 years, this book claims to reveal how thought about heaven has developed over the centuries. Illustrated with more than 190 historic maps and drawings. Scafi touches on the nature of faith, theology, reason, and philosophy.

monastery
Corinna Rossi. The treasures of the Monastery of Saint Catherine. [text by Corinna Rossi; photographs by Araldo de Luca; foreword by Archbishop Damianos of Sinai; translation by Jay Jaseph Hyams]. Vercelli, Italy : White Star ; [New York : Distributed in US and Canada by Rizzoli International], 2006.
Simply a fascinating history of the Monastery of St. Catherine, a monastery founded in the 5th Century when the mother of Constantine funded its establishment on what was believed to be the original site of the burning bursh, this book is beautiful if nothing else. The monastery it chronicles is (I think) a Greek Orthodox monastery, and houses artwork, artifacts, and a library of texts that is second only to the Vatican (does the Codex Sinaiaticus sound familiar?). A fascinating pictorial chronicle of a very odd, but historically important, place.

Popularity: 64% [?]

alt="Feed" /> comments rss

Creative Commons Creative Commons

WordPress
eXTReMe Tracker