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Emily O

Purpose for this Diigo group and suggestions for use - 7 views

This Diigo group is for fellow SLISers preparing for or enrolled in the culminating project for the Masters in Library and Information Science at San Jose State University, known as LIBR 289, the e...

introduction orientation invitation

started by Emily O on 14 Jul 09 no follow-up yet
Emily O

An Open Letter to New Graduate Students - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

shared by Emily O on 04 Sep 10 - Cached
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    "Build a personal research library. As a graduate student, one of the things you are most likely to be doing at any given time is reading (although you'll note that @j_l_r below recommends not doing all of what's assigned!). You will read articles, book chapters, and entire books much faster than you would have ever thought possible. And unless these articles fall into your area of interest, you might be inclined to forget about them as soon as the seminar meeting is passed. But we'd like to suggest that you begin as early as possible in your studies to build a personal research library. A personal research library is a record of what you've read and what you thought about it. It can be as simple as a citation, a few keywords, and a brief abstract. We'd recommend using Zotero (see Amy's posts on Getting Started with Zotero, parts One and Two) or EndNote, but even a box of 3x5 cards is better than trying to remember that really great essay from your first semester in grad school five years down the road when you're writing your dissertation. A little extra work now will pay big dividends in the future, especially if you change your research project."
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    I see this as especially important for that e-portfolio I did for library school. I did a lot of extra research because I didn't remember/know where to find many of the articles I had read that would be useful support for my ideas on the competencies.
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    I see this as especially important for that e-portfolio I did for library school. I did a lot of extra research because I didn't remember/know where to find many of the articles I had read that would be useful support for my ideas on the competencies.
Emily O

InfoMatters - No more information seeking models please - 1 views

  • I consider the world not to be in need of any more models of information seeking behavior, since I consider there to be far too many of these out there already. Worse, most of these are not really models at all but vague representations involving arrows, boxes and circles that contain little more than common sense.
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    I have to explain the main models or concepts behind information seeking for Competency J. The commentaries are good because some try to defend, others agree with the writer.
Emily O

Social Research Methods - 2 views

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    I never took a research course so this site helps me organize and understand research concepts so I can figure out what I did in my SLIS career that points to my understanding of these concepts.
Emily O

Book Club in a Bag and Competency D - 0 views

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    An example of how Diigo is useful for presenting a collection of resources. I used this Book Club in a Bag marketing project for Competency D.
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    Resources for launching new Book Club in a Bag program at Berkeley Public Library (volunteer project)
Emily O

289 E Portfolio - 0 views

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    This page includes many sites I visited for several different competencies.
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    Resources for the e-portfolio to be completed in Spring Semester 09 at SJSU/SLIS
Emily O

Library Garden: The Millennial Generation and Libraries: An Interview with Richard Swee... - 0 views

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    Good discussion of Millennials, nature of catalogs and databases, library reference services, and whether these meet the needs of today's students
Emily O

SocialFishing...: Tagging As a Community Building Tool - 0 views

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    Tagging As a Community Building Tool I'm just finished an awesome book called Tagging: People-Powered MetaData for the Social Web by Gene Smith. It sounds like a dry subject, but tagging is really super cool and ha massive implications for the design, building and nurturing of online communities and I thought I'd jot down some notes I took straight out of the book so you can see why. ************************************* How tagging works: 1) Tags are multiple ways of finding something 2) Tags are a way to browse 3) Tags are part of a community pool - act as a bridge between personal and community knowledge 4) Tags connect objects to other objects 5) Tags are hooks used to pull information together from other website that use tags, like Technorait, Flickr, Delicious. Tags by themselves are like a filing system without files - needs USERS and RESOURCES to be useful. Tags can be created from three perspectives: - Information Architecture (organizational content) - Social Software - to facilitate group interaction - Personal Information Management (PIM) - organizing stuff for an individual's use. There can be friction between these. Tagging is related to the re-emergence of oral culture online. (Alex Wright) Tagging is NOT like folders, where you move something from one place (inbox) to another (folder) - tags allow things to live is several places at once. Tagging is SOCIAL = personal + collaborative at the same time. Tags show minority viewpoints as well as consensus. (Tag Clouds are a visualization of this). Value Centered Design = value comes from balancing the goals of the people who create the system (RETURN ON INVESTMENT) with those of the people who use the system (RETURN ON EXPERIENCE). Motivations for users to tag (ROE): - ease of use - to manage personal info - sharing and collaborating (---> communities of interest) - fun - self-expression Business benefits (ROI): - to facilitate collaboration - to obtain descriptive metadata - to enhance fin
Emily O

Principle of least effort - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    I must remember to include this principle. It certainly is universal to humans, of any expertise level, at least in most situations.
Emily O

510 Reading Journal: 3.2 ASK for Information Retrieval: Part I Background and Theory - 1 views

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    Good summary of Belkin's ASK model
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