Lankes to give Lazerow Lecture

PrattLankes has been invited to give a lecture as part of the Lazerow Lecture series at the Pratt School of Information and Library Science on April 28, 5:30-6:30. The lecture series is supported by ISI Thomson. Here is the title and abstract.

Reference: An Island of Chaos in a Sea of Order

Much of librarianship is about bringing order to the wilds of the information environment. Books, articles, media and documents are wrestled to the ground, branded with a classification and corralled onto a shelf (either virtually or physically). Reference started its existence as a bridge from a patron’s unordered view to a structured collection. However, as the amount of disordered information available to the average user has far outstripped cataloged collection, reference’s unique inductive nature has come to the fore. Reference has become a creative author and tool creator in the library. This lecture will explore the unique nature of reference in libraries, and examine the potential of reference to secure libraries place in the 21st century.

Eisenberg, Lankes and Nicholson Receive MacArthur Grant

MacArthur Logo

No, not that MacArthur grant…this one funds the creation and the “Credibility Commons” which includes Reference Extract.

the Credibility Commons is an experimental environment enabling individuals the opportunity to try out different approaches to improving access to credible information on the World Wide Web. Tools will be provided to researchers as well as the public, allowing them to try out search strategies, collections and other approaches to improving access to credible information. The Commons can be viewed as a collaborative space in which to share ideas, data sets, results and innovations. This project is sponsored by the MacArthur Foundation who is deeply invested in improving access to credible information on the World Wide Web.

No College Left Behind

Be afraid, be very afraid. When you’ve gotten me in a conspiratorial mood over the past few months you may have heard me grumbling about how higher education is the next target of the U.S. Department of Education and education reformists. Think of No Child Left Behind days of national testing, “rigorous” academic standards (read national curriculum) and the like but for universities.
No, you say, Higher Education is different! We’re the best in the world…etc.

Here’s the scenario that happened in K-12 education…see if it sounds familiar: a group of concerned business leaders get together and say that the education is failing to prepare the work force for high tech and competitive jobs (anyone heard Bill Gates recently on why they are setting up research centers in India and China). The Department of Education and members of Congress start talking about how these education institutions can be both locally controlled, and more “accountable” (this is a key word in education circles… it is often operationalized as standardized testing and methods for federal control) considering the sizable federal investment. State wide projects are highlighted on how they can improve (it always seems to be Texas). No Child Left Behind gets passed with bipartisan support.

Now…read this ( http://insidehighered.com/news/2005/12/09/commission ):

“Miller sought to shake that complacency from his very first statements at Thursdayâ??s meeting â?? and he even got a head start on that. A profile of him that appeared in Thursdayâ??s edition of USA Today quoted Miller as calling it â??highly probableâ?? that the commission would recommend instituting some kind of national testing to measure college studentsâ?? learning, along the lines of whatâ??s done in elementary and secondary education.”

Then look at the commission set up by the U.S. Department of Education here: http://www.ed.gov/about/bdscomm/list/hiedfuture/meetings.html

Note this presentation: “A Transparent Approach to Higher Education Accountability: Developed and Implemented by The University of Texas System”
Now listen to this piece from NPR:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5205322

Even if you don’t buy into conspiracy theories, I think it would do us all some good to keep up with the workings of this commission.