Hey, all,
My school librarian forwarded the following message to every faculty member K-12 this morning. I haven't pursued the links in this rather incendiary listserv post from the Encyclopedia Brittanica Online folks, but browsing the titles is enough to suggest it's an opening salvo in what may be an escalating debate. What are your thoughts? Do you have any suggestions for resources I might have in my back pocket when I engage in a discussion of this with my week-long Web 2.0 for Education workshop at my K12 school in July? Have any of you been "invited" to this forum discussion?
Passing this on to wiser and more experienced 2.0ers...
Here's the post:
Take a look at Web 2.0: The Sleep of Reason
Some interesting food for thought about where/who we are getting our information from and why we should be questioning how this is changing.
[Librarian's signature]
Dear Britannica Online Subscriber,
You are invited to join a unique discussion about education and learning in the information age. On Monday, June 11, Britannica launched the discussion, which is centered on several essays by Michael Gorman, the recently retired Dean of Library Services at California State University (Fresno) and past president of the American Library Association.
Mr. Gorman's subject is the state of learning, education, and information gathering in the era of "Web 2.0." He writes on a wide range of topics, including:
• The importance of authoritative sources on the Internet
• Blogging and the rise of the "citizen journalist"
• The "flight from expertise" in today's interactive online world
Britannica has invited others with a diversity of viewpoints to respond to Gorman's essays. Our goal is to facilitate this ongoing conversation, and we invite you to participate. You can find the Web 2.0 Forum on the Britannica Blog featured on the home page of Britannica Online:
Web 2.0 Forum Schedule & Contributors:
Encyclopædia Britannica will feature several Michael Gorman essays on the Britannica Blog, as well as both supporting and opposing viewpoints.
• Monday, June 11: "Web 2.0: The Sleep of Reason, Part I"
• Tuesday, June 12: "Web 2.0: The Sleep of Reason, Part II"
• Wednesday - Friday: Additional discussion
• Monday, June 18: "The Siren Song of the Internet: Part I"
• Tuesday, June 19: "The Siren Song of the Internet: Part II"
• Wednesday - Friday: Additional discussion
• Monday, June 25: "Jabberwiki: The Educational Response, Part I"
• Tuesday, June 26: "Jabberwiki: The Educational Response, Part II"
• Wednesday - Friday: Additional discussion
Some of the expected contributors include:
• Sven Birkerts (Harvard University; author of The Gutenberg Elegies: The Fate of Reading in an Electronic Age)
• Nicholas Carr (noted writer on information technologies and author of The Big Switch: Our New Digital Destiny)
• Andrew Keen (author of The Cult of the Amateur: How the Democratization of the Digital World is Assaulting Our Economy, Our Culture, and Our Values)
• Thomas Mann (reference librarian, Library of Congress)
• Dan Gillmor (director of Center of Citizen Media and author of We the Media: Grassroots Journalism by the People, for the People)
• Clay Shirky (consultant, writer on information technologies, and professor in New York University's graduate Interactive Telecommunications Program)
• Danah Boyd (fellow at the University of Southern California Annenberg Center for Communications)
• Matthew Battles (formerly of Harvard University's Houghton Library and author of Library: An Unquiet History)
• Scott McLemee (author of the "Intellectual Affairs" column for Inside Higher Ed)
• Robert McHenry (former editor-in-chief, Encyclopædia Britannica)
• Gregory McNamee (veteran freelance writer, author of 25 books, and a weekly contributor to the Britannica Blog) We welcome you to participate in this open discussion, and hope that it is of value to you and your students and patrons.
Best regards,
Rick Lumsden
Director, Institutional Sales & Marketing
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
[ mailto:contact@eb.com ]contact@eb.com
(800) 621-3900
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