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In Command! Kids and Teens Build and Manage their own Information Spaces, andÉ Learning to Manage Themselves in Those Spaces

LMC Source | Robin T. Williams and David V. Loertscher | 2007


ISBN 13: 9781933170360


Most school libraries have a Web site or blog that provides a wealth of resources and links to information. However, young people may be saying, “We love you, library, but we love Google more.” This book and accompanying Web site takes a new approach in he battle to capture the attention and serve student needs: It asks each child and teen to construct their own home page using iGoogle, and construct three sections of their own information space:
  • Personal Space (with assignments, calendars, hobbies, and other critical personal tools). This is a very tightly controlled space that the student can change regularly. If the school library has a blog, then information can be fed to every student via an RSS feed. Thus the librarian can notify a class about a particular library assignment, offering help and deadlines that will assist the student in their daily work.
  • Group Space for doing projects with others often using Web 2.0 tools. For example, a class may be doing a project with another class in a foreign country. A ning, a wiki, and blogs can be used to collaboratively share information, do joint planning, and share expertise on a variety of subjects. This capability has really developed over the past five years. The concept that multiple students can be seeing and adding to the same page in a word processor is a totally new concept whose time has come.
  • Outer Space (controlled access to the larger Internet). Students will want to create ways of accessing the entire Internet but also learn how to manage these explorations to avoid dangers and pitfalls.
Thus, they learn to manage their own information space. But, even more importantly, they learn to manage themselves within that space. The time has come to offer young people a gift of a lifetime—control over the voices clamouring for their attention and the tools they need to emerge as true information literates. Unique.

What does it mean to control ourselves within our information space? It would seem that the rules of the road, crossing the road, driving a car safely and other rules thathelp us go through life need to be taught in information space as well. We learn to cross the street safely, we learn to navigate through information space knowing that there might be predators trying to divert our attention. Thus the librarian and the technology staff help kids and teens develop reponsibility—the idea is to give every kid or teen a fishing pole rather than a fish. Tech directors may immediately say “no” to such a radical idea. We are betting that developing individual control is far superior to being managed.


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