30 Years of Information and Educational Change: How should our
practice respond?
You'd better start swimming or you'll sink like a stone, For the times they are a
changin - Bob Dylan
When my blog reached its first
birthday in August 2005, I got to thinking about how dramatically the library
and the classroom have changed for so many of us in the last couple of years.
Then I got to thinking about how
incredibly dramatic the change has been since I first graduated library school
in 1976 ,and when I had to do
that masters degree over again for my educational credential in 1988.
While I learned programming the first time around and personal computer
applications the second time around, the current rate of change has altered the
landscape so dramatically I would not today be able to survive with those
ancient library school skills.
Clearly, the changes occurring between 1976 and 1988, when the PC and automation were becoming ubiquitous in
libraries, had nothing on the changes we were to see in the last five, no the
last 2 years!
Retooling was essential for me. It is essential for the survival of the profession.
We cannot expect to assume a leadership role in information technology and instruction, we cannot claim any
credibility with students, faculty, or administrators if we do not recognize
and thoughtfully exploit the information and communication paradigm shifts of the past two years.
I attempted to chart the changes
I've observed to help plan for the future.
I invite you all to help me refine
this chart.How life has changed since I left library school.
How should practice respond and change?