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Main Authors: Harvey, Carl A., II, Kaplan, Allison G.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ826433
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author Harvey, Carl A., II
Kaplan, Allison G.
author_facet Harvey, Carl A., II
Kaplan, Allison G.
Harvey, Carl A., II
Kaplan, Allison G.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The Future Begins @ Your Library Harvey, Carl A., II Kaplan, Allison G. Media Specialists School Libraries Web Based Instruction Web Sites Internet Information Technology Computer Mediated Communication Librarians "Future" often conjures up something far off. Library media specialists come to realize that the future is often much closer than they think. Web 2.0 technologies have swiftly taken library media specialists into a whole new realm of possibilities. No longer consumers, they have the opportunity to become producers of information and collaborators with others in knowledge production. The authors of this article left the 2005 AASL conference in Pittsburgh refreshed and excited about the new ideas, techniques, and resources they had learned that could improve the services and instruction they provide to students and staff. In this article, the authors offer three steps to prepare the way for the next AASL conference in Reno.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ826433
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2007
record_format eric
spellingShingle The Future Begins @ Your Library
Harvey, Carl A., II
Kaplan, Allison G.
Media Specialists
School Libraries
Web Based Instruction
Web Sites
Internet
Information Technology
Computer Mediated Communication
Librarians
The Future Begins @ Your Library Harvey, Carl A., II Kaplan, Allison G. Media Specialists School Libraries Web Based Instruction Web Sites Internet Information Technology Computer Mediated Communication Librarians "Future" often conjures up something far off. Library media specialists come to realize that the future is often much closer than they think. Web 2.0 technologies have swiftly taken library media specialists into a whole new realm of possibilities. No longer consumers, they have the opportunity to become producers of information and collaborators with others in knowledge production. The authors of this article left the 2005 AASL conference in Pittsburgh refreshed and excited about the new ideas, techniques, and resources they had learned that could improve the services and instruction they provide to students and staff. In this article, the authors offer three steps to prepare the way for the next AASL conference in Reno.
title The Future Begins @ Your Library
topic Media Specialists
School Libraries
Web Based Instruction
Web Sites
Internet
Information Technology
Computer Mediated Communication
Librarians
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ826433