By Andrea Lhotka |
Sedona Public Library
Sedona, AZ - July 01, 2008 - "The
computers are winning." I saw these simple words scrawled on
cardboard in permanent ink hanging in the window of an abandoned
building in Tucson, AZ. If you've seen the movie "The
Terminator" then images of Arnold Schwarzenegger, cyborg metal
endoskeletons, and total world annihilation are appearing before
your eyes. I say "disregard" all that. Prophesy is certainly not
our business at the Sedona Public Library. We deal in books and
information at a smoking bargain. What I'm talking about is the
conflict between digital and analog resources or more expressly
the tension amongst their respective users.
The opening was intended to catch your attention, but in a
matter of speaking the computers have attained great success in
this endeavor, though not in any dystopic futuristic sense. The
evidence is pervasive: spellbound coffee shop inhabitants
clacking away at their laptops and cell phone users willfully
rewriting the codes of social interaction. The inexorable march
into the future is without pity, but for some the beat is a bit
muffled.
This is in fact an alarming topic for many librarians: the
digital divide which is essentially an obstacle to accessing
information from a lack in training or deficit in resources.
Since the World Wide Web was created in the early 90's and its
subsequent proliferation, information has been repositioned and
now inhabits a seemingly inexplicable, shadowy electronic
environment. Frequently the information and services that we
need once available in hardcover, on a microfiche reel, by
telephone, and so on are now only obtainable with a computer and
an Internet connection.
For many, gaining the requisite knowledge to operate a computer
is a terrifying concept, and this phenomenon most acutely
impacts those who attended schools before the explosion of
computer labs, computer instruction and the Internet. It is this
audience specifically that I address, in hopes that a feeling of
comfort with information technologies can be realized.
As a librarian working with the public and information
technology on a daily basis, my suggestion is that before you
chastise yourself and make a payment in the service of
self-doubt, identify the cause of your fear. In this regard I
submit that uncertainty, and lack of experience and training are
the major reasons. Humans do not achieve new proficiencies by
virtue of charisma or magic without the advantage of training,
study and hard-work. They do so out of personal curiosity or
necessity. Gaining new skills can start out ever so slowly. Be
patient with yourself. Talk to people. Sign up for a class. By
all means, ask your local librarian. We love to help!
The advantages of electronic media are difficult to dispute, and
the flaws cannot be left out. Contrasting Wikipedia with twenty
substantial and burdensome volumes of the Encyclopedia
Britannica is like comparing a walk down the street with a ride
on an $8,000 road bike. For those that do not know, Wikipedia is
an online multi-lingual encyclopedia updated continuously by
volunteers like you and me. It is a highly successful,
collaborative website providing an infinite supply of irritation
and admiration to librarians and educators everywhere. Though it
is given to vandalism, disorganization, and poor citation from
time to time, it is free of charge and unconstrained by the
practicalities of time and space on the scale of its physical
predecessors. Of course the Encyclopedia Britannica set the
standard for authoritative research, and has a reputation
constructed on two hundred years of experience.
But it depends which librarian you ask. Ask one of my senior and
fabulous colleagues a reference question and you may find
yourself in the reference or nonfiction section, and this is a
fine place to be! My experience and training do not lend
themselves to the reference section as much as they do to
databases and online resources. I am merely a product of my
generation and I have some catching up to do. Don't we all.
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