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Autor principal: Chew, Ivan
Formato: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ857118
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author Chew, Ivan
author_facet Chew, Ivan
Chew, Ivan
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Librarians 2.0: Sowing Padi in (the) SEA Chew, Ivan Web Sites Electronic Publishing Public Libraries Academic Libraries Foreign Countries Internet Librarians Diaries Journal Writing Computer Mediated Communication Social Networks Computer Software Library Services Encyclopedias Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to present an exploratory survey as part of a presentation for the Bridging Worlds 2008 conference. It seeks to understand how library institutions in the South East Asia (SEA) region have implemented Web 2.0 technologies--blogs, RSS feeds, wikis, or the use of services like Flickr, YouTube, de.lici.ous. Design/methodology/approach: Libraries surveyed were in: Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, People's Republic of China, Philippines, Singapore and Taiwan. The survey relied on references in published papers, internet searches and personal contacts. Findings: The survey found that more academic libraries than public libraries were using Web 2.0. technologies. Blogs and RSS feeds were the most common. Blogs were used mainly as web publishing tools rather than as a means to engage library users. Research limitations/implications: The survey is not comprehensive. The search relied mainly on English publications and keywords, while the native language of most countries surveyed was non-English. Future research could comprehensively cover each country, by the type of library or language. Practical implications: The paper contends that Web 2.0 does not rely on technology, but more on practice and participation. The emphasis should be on relationships rather than transactions. Suggestions are offered on how libraries can adopt a Library 2.0 mindset without focusing on technology. A call is made to establish an East Asian Librarians 2.0 directory. Originality/value: The paper offers a non-technological perspective to institutions and practising professionals who are reviewing their Web 2.0 implementation.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ857118
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2009
record_format eric
spellingShingle Librarians 2.0: Sowing Padi in (the) SEA
Chew, Ivan
Web Sites
Electronic Publishing
Public Libraries
Academic Libraries
Foreign Countries
Internet
Librarians
Diaries
Journal Writing
Computer Mediated Communication
Social Networks
Computer Software
Library Services
Encyclopedias
Librarians 2.0: Sowing Padi in (the) SEA Chew, Ivan Web Sites Electronic Publishing Public Libraries Academic Libraries Foreign Countries Internet Librarians Diaries Journal Writing Computer Mediated Communication Social Networks Computer Software Library Services Encyclopedias Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to present an exploratory survey as part of a presentation for the Bridging Worlds 2008 conference. It seeks to understand how library institutions in the South East Asia (SEA) region have implemented Web 2.0 technologies--blogs, RSS feeds, wikis, or the use of services like Flickr, YouTube, de.lici.ous. Design/methodology/approach: Libraries surveyed were in: Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, People's Republic of China, Philippines, Singapore and Taiwan. The survey relied on references in published papers, internet searches and personal contacts. Findings: The survey found that more academic libraries than public libraries were using Web 2.0. technologies. Blogs and RSS feeds were the most common. Blogs were used mainly as web publishing tools rather than as a means to engage library users. Research limitations/implications: The survey is not comprehensive. The search relied mainly on English publications and keywords, while the native language of most countries surveyed was non-English. Future research could comprehensively cover each country, by the type of library or language. Practical implications: The paper contends that Web 2.0 does not rely on technology, but more on practice and participation. The emphasis should be on relationships rather than transactions. Suggestions are offered on how libraries can adopt a Library 2.0 mindset without focusing on technology. A call is made to establish an East Asian Librarians 2.0 directory. Originality/value: The paper offers a non-technological perspective to institutions and practising professionals who are reviewing their Web 2.0 implementation.
title Librarians 2.0: Sowing Padi in (the) SEA
topic Web Sites
Electronic Publishing
Public Libraries
Academic Libraries
Foreign Countries
Internet
Librarians
Diaries
Journal Writing
Computer Mediated Communication
Social Networks
Computer Software
Library Services
Encyclopedias
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ857118