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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lesk, Michael
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED414929
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author Lesk, Michael
author_facet Lesk, Michael
Lesk, Michael
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Digital Libraries: A Unifying or Distributing Force? Lesk, Michael Academic Libraries Computer Mediated Communication Educational Change Electronic Journals Electronic Libraries Futures (of Society) Higher Education Information Seeking Information Technology Online Searching Publishing Industry Reading Reference Materials Reference Services Scholarly Writing User Needs (Information) World Wide Web This paper addresses several questions about digital libraries. What kinds of communities will digital library technology produce? The Web seems much more popular then electronic journals--does this mean that surfing will replace literature reading, and that "nerds" building HTML hierarchies will supplant publishers? Will this mean that the universities will lose control of the quality of what their students read? Will the ability to do more research in one's dorm room mean that students will not talk to one another at all, that they will talk to people somewhere else in the world, or that they will talk to their roommates more than ever, perhaps about how to use the computer system? Digital information threatens our ideas of locality: will the association of students with a particular university, let alone university library, survive the Web? Might online references and online multimedia lectures produce the 'virtual university of the United States' and if so would that be desirable? Universities serve a variety of social functions which the Web can augment or diminish, depending on people's actions. The Web also may threaten ideas of quality in scholarship. This paper addresses potential consequences of the change to digital information, and suggests that universities can cope by being more proactive in their use of the Web for reward and communication. (Author)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED414929
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1997
record_format eric
spellingShingle Digital Libraries: A Unifying or Distributing Force?
Lesk, Michael
Academic Libraries
Computer Mediated Communication
Educational Change
Electronic Journals
Electronic Libraries
Futures (of Society)
Higher Education
Information Seeking
Information Technology
Online Searching
Publishing Industry
Reading
Reference Materials
Reference Services
Scholarly Writing
User Needs (Information)
World Wide Web
Digital Libraries: A Unifying or Distributing Force? Lesk, Michael Academic Libraries Computer Mediated Communication Educational Change Electronic Journals Electronic Libraries Futures (of Society) Higher Education Information Seeking Information Technology Online Searching Publishing Industry Reading Reference Materials Reference Services Scholarly Writing User Needs (Information) World Wide Web This paper addresses several questions about digital libraries. What kinds of communities will digital library technology produce? The Web seems much more popular then electronic journals--does this mean that surfing will replace literature reading, and that "nerds" building HTML hierarchies will supplant publishers? Will this mean that the universities will lose control of the quality of what their students read? Will the ability to do more research in one's dorm room mean that students will not talk to one another at all, that they will talk to people somewhere else in the world, or that they will talk to their roommates more than ever, perhaps about how to use the computer system? Digital information threatens our ideas of locality: will the association of students with a particular university, let alone university library, survive the Web? Might online references and online multimedia lectures produce the 'virtual university of the United States' and if so would that be desirable? Universities serve a variety of social functions which the Web can augment or diminish, depending on people's actions. The Web also may threaten ideas of quality in scholarship. This paper addresses potential consequences of the change to digital information, and suggests that universities can cope by being more proactive in their use of the Web for reward and communication. (Author)
title Digital Libraries: A Unifying or Distributing Force?
topic Academic Libraries
Computer Mediated Communication
Educational Change
Electronic Journals
Electronic Libraries
Futures (of Society)
Higher Education
Information Seeking
Information Technology
Online Searching
Publishing Industry
Reading
Reference Materials
Reference Services
Scholarly Writing
User Needs (Information)
World Wide Web
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED414929