Taming Technolust and my 5 TED talks for librarians

I was lucky enough to have the opportunity to spend Thursday in Ithaca, NY attending Michael Stephens‘ Taming Technolust Workshop. Michael and I have communicated via social networks for the last few months and it was great to finally meet him in person and to take part in his workshop. Additionally, due to the interactive nature of Michael’s workshops, I was able to meet several librarians and hear their perspective on everything from Ebooks to QR Codes to social media to mobile devices – and everything else in between. It is surprising just how much was covered in 6 short hours.

During the workshop Michael briefly touched on the fact that librarians should be ready and willing to learn from sources outside LIS and then apply it to the profession. This is something that is of particular interest to me. In fact, I even wrote a guest post on Hack Library School about non-LIS blogs that LIS students should follow.

This leads me to TED. Throughout the course of the day topics would come up that kept reminding me of some TED talks that I have seen. I have been an avid TED viewer for years and watch one while I eat lunch almost every day. Following Andy Woodworth’s lead, I’ve compiled 5 TED talks that I think every librarian should watch. All five of these relate back to something that was discussed (briefly or in-depth) during the Taming Technolust workshop.

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Early in the day the term “Learning Analytics” was used. In this TED talk Salman Khan discusses the Khan Academy, which gives us a good idea of the direction that learning is headed and how educators can track their students progress and offer them focused help.

During the short augmented reality discussion the topic of museums came up. What are they going to look like in the future? Will everyone just be walking around looking at their gadget? Well, what if we don’t even have to go to the museum at all? Amit Sood explains how he created a very detailed digital museum. This talk has a lot of implications for digital libraries as well.

An entire group dedicated 30 minutes of their time to thinking about gaming in libraries. In this talk, Jane McGonigal discusses how gaming is shaping young minds and the learning potential she sees in them.

The workshop was called Taming Technolust; so, obviously, there was a lot of talk about new gadgets. Though there seemed to be a lot of “techno-uncertainty” with both librarians and patrons, I ask how someone could watch Mike Matas give this demonstration of what a book could look like on the iPad and not be excited. I also wrote a bit about what this can mean for education HERE.

As libraries move towards more “social” spaces focused on access to the Internet and electricity, the future of the web is something in which librarians are going to be heavily invested. Kevin Kelley explores what the next 5000 days of the web might look like in this talk.

BONUS TALK:

Kostas Grammatis: Internet as a Human Right

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3 Comments on “Taming Technolust and my 5 TED talks for librarians”

  1. [...] with Michael via blogs, twitter, facebook and email. I was also lucky enough to attend his Taming Technolust Workshop in Ithaca, NY in early [...]

  2. Michael says:

    These are all great videos. I especially appreciate the work of Salman Khan and Jane McGonigal. There is great talk on gaming by Tom Chatfield as well. I just feel that making learning modular and providing game-based incentives are such great ways to increase user engagement and the use of library resources. It just makes me imagine if every library resource had a video or slideshow that accompanied it as well as a set of tasks or challenges to test the user’s ability to use that particular resource. If they needed extra help, there would of course still be sessions to assist students and then there would be certain rewards for doing so many challenges, etc. and it would all these scores would be publicly accessible. I know some libraries have already run some programs like this but these are definitely ideas that libraries could run with.

  3. [...] of the library.  You gather up all the information on how Internet access is a basic human right (also noted in a TEDx video — the bonus video at the end of the list but all are worth watching).  You note how many [...]


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