13 October 2007

Zombies!



For my High Tech Learning class, I've created a blog called "When Zombies Attack". I plan on adding to it pretty regularly with zombie-related topics that could be integrated into a classroom unit on zombies.

Any doubts about integrating horror into the classroom or library?

Let me quote myself (and myself quoting Darren Shan) on the "About Silver Lisa and Her Love of Zombies"* of the When Zombies Attack blog:

Horror author, Darren Shan, in his article entitled, Giving Rein to Horror, describes himself as a young boy who loved to write gory stories and once decided to show his story to a teacher who he trusted. This brave move resulted in Shan being expelled from school and scarred for a very long time. Shan was able to eventually overcome his distrust of sharing his stories with others, and has become a very successful author.

In Giving Rein to Horror, Shan provides his observations on the value of the horror genre when it comes to encouraging young adults to learn:

We don’t live in an ideal world. I know teaching’s a hard job, that it’s easier to mark essays on conventional subjects than give a free rein to surly teenagers who want to write about zombies chowing down on fresh brains. But creativity isn’t a smooth ride. Sometimes it demands detours down grimy alleys of the mind, places no adult might want to visit, but which developing teens feel drawn to. As a teacher, you can choose to block such trends in your classroom and demand your students tread the straight and narrow line, forcing them to give up on writing or labour on by themselves, alone in the dark.



Or you can encourage imagination wherever you find it, explore the quirkier corners of writing with those who truly do ‘think outside the box’, and try to help even the most creatively wayward students find their true direction. If you do, you might help the next Poe, Mary Shelley or Stephen King to blossom.



Of course, you might inadvertently create the next Charles Manson too — but, hey, them’s the breaks!







*Silver Lisa is my pseudonym. I have a pseudonym. WOW!

20 September 2007

mmmmmm Ice Cream

I'm taking an online SLIS class called High Tech Learning. For my latest assignment, I was to create a video project where I was to learn something new. Check out my wiki on making pumpkin spice ice cream and be prepared to crave something sweet.

20 August 2007

Deep Caverns Can Fill Empty Children


The following essay was written as part of an assignment for the SLIS course I am taking as an IUPUI distances student (S603 High Tech Learning, Instructed by Annette Lamb, PhD):



Deep Caverns Can

Fill Empty Children

"Modern scientific stupidity masquerades as intellectual knowledge - which it is not. Real knowledge has to be earned by hard and painful thinking; it can't be generated in group discussions or group therapies but only in lonely sessions with yourself. Real knowledge is earned only by ceaseless questioning of yourself and others, and by the labor of independent verification; you can't buy it from a government agent, a social worker, a psychologist, a licensed specialist, or a schoolteacher. There isn't a public school in this country set up to allow the discovery of real knowledge - not even the best ones - although here and there individual teachers, like guerrilla fighters, sabotage the system and work toward this ideal. But since schools are set up to classify people rather than to see them as unique, even the best schoolteachers are strictly limited in the amount of questioning they can tolerate."

--John Taylor Gatto, "
Confederacy of Dunces: The Tyranny Of Compulsory Schooling"


John Taylor Gatto, retired teacher and well-known critic of compulsory schooling, in his book, The Underground History of American Education, gives his "recipe for empty children," which essentially outlines fifteen commonly accepted and celebrated practices of institutionally-based schools that Gatto contends results in children who are void of meaningful learning experiences. Underground History aims to expose the genesis, history, and scope of the "new mass schooling which came about slowly but continuously after 1890," (Gatto, "American Education History Tour"). Gatto asserts that traditional institutional instruction in American has four specific purposes. The first three, "To make good people...To make good citizens...And to make each student find some particular talents to develop to the maximum," were existent even before the American Revolution. However, the fourth "new purpose" of institutional schooling, "to serve business and government," (which has been evolving slowly but surely since 1890), could only be implemented under the right conditions (id.):

[The fourth purpose] could only be achieved efficiently by isolating children from the real world, with adults who themselves were isolated from the real world, and everyone in the confinement isolated from one another.

Only then could the necessary training in boredom and bewilderment begin. Such training is necessary to produce dependable consumers and dependent citizens who would always look for a teacher to tell them what to do in later life, even if that teacher was an ad man or television anchor.] (id.)

I suspect that everyone who has experienced compulsory schooling can recall countless classroom situations where the instructor taught in a manner that Gatto would recognize the students as "empty children". In fact, Gatto would argue that this is unavoidable by the very nature of institutionalized schooling. Even the most aggressive school reform cannot hope to address this condition, as the production of empty children is a necessary component of the fourth purpose. In other words, turning out graduating classes of empty children is the ultimate goal within the context of mass schooling. Along this line, Gatto asserts:

School is a place where a comprehensive social vision is learned. Without a contrary vision to offer, the term "school reform" is only a misnomer describing trivial changes. Any large alteration of forced schooling, which might jeopardize the continuity of workers and customers that the corporate economy depends upon, is unthinkable without some radical change in popular perception preceding it. Business/School partnerships and School-to-Work legislation aren’t positive developments, but they represent the end of any pretense that ordinary children should be educated.

(
Underground History)

Dr. Annette Lamb, IUPUI professor and leader in the field of Educational Technology, reflects on the relationship between the purposes of formal education, the potential use of technology in education, and the philosophies of John Taylor Gatto as follows:

As we explore ways to use new technologies, it's important that we reflect on the purpose of formal education. From mandates like No Child Left Behind to the constant barrage of new educational theories and methods, learners and their teachers are bombarded with conflicting messages about the role of formal education. The skyrocketing technology resources and tools for teaching and learning add to this information overload. With all these opportunities, does the American system of education promote eager thinkers or empty children? How? Why?

Watch the short video titled
Empty Children. Some people would argue that formal education systems aren't meeting the needs of today's children. Do you agree or disagree? How can technology help fill the void of empty children or contribute to the problem? Do books like The Underground History of American Education by John Taylor Gatto promote misinformation or advocate real alternatives?

(Lamb, "
High Tech Learning: Issues.")

After having read much of Gatto's Underground History, I realize that I cannot exhaustively answer Dr. Lamb's questions within the confines of this particular essay. According to Gatto, the issues surrounding Dr. Lamb's questions are amazingly complex and deeply intertwined within America's histories of politics, government, psychology, healthcare, education, economics, consumerism, religion, and beyond. However, just as I asserted above that any person who is a product of the American school system would be able to recognize clear instances of being taught as an "empty child", hopefully each of us has had moments of genuine and insightful learning that arose out of the assistance of a teacher who strove to promote the "whole child"[1], and, whether conscious of the existence of the four purposes of mass schooling or not, committed small acts of sabotage (Gatto,"Confederacy of Dunces") Unfortunately, these moments are all-to-rare and usually happen haphazardly, and cannot possibly counter the power of the fourth purpose of compulsory schooling.

Still, based upon Gatto's "recipe for empty children" (where the recipe for the "whole child" is to do the complete opposite of the empty child recipe), individuals charged with teaching America's children can take measures to try to counter the agenda of the fourth purpose and do so most effectively when they become aware of the genesis of institutionalized schooling as described by Gatto. Some of the major components of nurturing a "whole child" include developing the ability to self-teach, exhibiting self-sufficiency (including working for one's self as an adult rather than under the management of others), meaningfully engaging in private ritual ("such as the rituals of food preparation and family dining"), the learning of useful knowledge ("such as how to build a house, repair a car, make a dress"), the development of the instinct to question authority, and learning for the sake of learning itself.

In her article "Energize Your Program: Collaborating Across the Curriculum," Dr. Annette Lamb presents many specific examples of practical ways in which individuals teachers can do their best to battle the fourth purpose. Along this line, Dr. Lamb explains that:

While reading, writing, and mathematics are tools for expressing and understanding ideas and information, curricular areas such as art, music, health, and physical education inspire students to be active and creative. From books and blogs to GPS and video projects, this...stresses practical strategies for collaborating with teachers across the curriculum to address standards, as well as promote a passion for learning.

* * *
Energizing your program means creating synergy. This can be accomplished by combining resources and designing exciting, inquiry-rich environments.


In this article, and on a complementary webpage entitled "Keeping it Real: Active Learning," Dr. Lamb focuses on ways to incorporate multisensory activities that enhance the learning experience for students, especially those that are technologically-based. Technology-based activities are often more self-paced and are designed for students to work independent of direct instruction from the teacher. For example, Dr. Lamb provides links to virtual fieldtrips to such places as The Great Barrier Reef, Japan and Field Trip Earth, and online activities such as Be an Architect, Create a Sculpture, Symmetry Webquest, and Human Body Atlas.

However, the paradox remains that the distribution of grades will still be a part of even the most hands-on or independent activity (technologically-based or otherwise) that occurs within the formal classroom , which happens to be the 11th "ingredient" of Gatto's recipe for an empty child ("Grade, evaluate, and assess children constantly and publicly. Begin early. Make sure everyone knows his or her rank,") (Underground History). In addition, Gatto warns against the propensity for addition to technology in the 7th ingredient for an empty child ("Addict the young to machinery and electronic displays. Teach that these are desirable to recreation and learning both,") (id. )

Gatto sees the solution to "empty children" as lying outside of the confines of the walls of the institutionalized school:

At every school where I taught, I told kids that as long as they would do 90% of the work, and as long as the idea was there, and as long as they'd sit still for my lectures about the nuances of the idea, then I was willing to be their assistant. The major access road to self-development is raw experience, but schools often deny that to students. Memorizing notes off the board is not real work. Overthrowing a political dynasty that doesn't want a horrible monument to the horrible Lennon in Central Park is real work.

* * *

Let's shift to the world of business and work for a moment. Grades and gold stars in school prepare people for pay raises and promotions on the job, don't they?
They're BS. I'm against those things. But don't make me look like one of those romantic people who are against them because I don't want to see kids compete with one another. Grades don't measure anything other than your relevant obedience to a manager.

(Pink, "I'm a Saboteur.")

Further, in his presentation "A Map, a Mirror, and a Wristwatch," Gatto states:

[C]ertain basic tools of self-knowledge like mirrors, maps, clocks, and so on are kept away from children - at least in any classroom you would care to visit in New York City. Other basic tools aren't around either, like hammers, chisels, saws, glue, telephones, calendars, typewriters, paper, pens, scissors, rulers. They just aren't there, at least not in accessible places. Schools are stripped bare of effective tools, not because of lack of money but because the autonomy that tools confer works against the collective socialization logic schools are about.

Tools constitute a curriculum of power. This seems something too fundamental to belabor. It is hard to make tool-competent people into a proletariat. Did you ever wonder why kids don't do the cooking and serving in a school, or the glazing, wiring, plumbing, roofing, and furniture repair? I've wondered about that often. At any rate a malaise follows the withdrawal of tools from common life. Of 62 functioning classrooms in my intermediate school there is a clock in exactly one of them. And it's been years since I saw a student wear a wristwatch. What could be going on? Something spooky I can tell you.

A few months ago, as I was driving to work, I was listening to the Diane Rehm Show on NPR. Diana was interviewing Marietta McCarty, the author of a book called Little Big Minds: Sharing Philosophy with Kids . McCarty's book stems from the central premise that children are natural philosophers and includes 15 chapters, each one dealing with a specific philosophic concept and each concept being connected to two philosophers (for example, the concept of Nature is explored through the philosophies of Lau Tzu and Baruch Spinoza.) Little Big Minds is meant to act as a guide for sharing philosophy with children, whether you are a teacher, a parent, a relative, a mentor--basically the sky's the limit as to your role in the child's life. The "program" can be followed step-by-step, or simply whenever a teachable moment arises.

McCarty sets out a list of teaching techniques, including starting each structured session with quiet time: "Children gradually experience the benefits of becoming still, realizing that being calm makes clear thinking possible. Simply sitting in silence reduces mental clutter in any life, and kids find it curiously powerful to settle themselves," (xviii.) I can't help but think of the fact that the types of self-directed activities that technology makes possible are generally quiet ones, requiring calm inner reflection.

McCarty also points out the importance of using various mediums for investigating the various philosophical concepts, including art, music, poetry, and literature. I think that many of the activities suggested throughout Little Big Minds, therefore, would be well complemented from the wealth or resources available on the internet or other electronic materials.

Rather than by grading, McCarty suggests that a sense of completion in the form of a philosophy journal gives children a sense of satisfaction. Gatto would appreciate this aspect of Little Big Minds. Like Gatto, McCarty stresses the importance of the practicality of knowledge:

The best way to give philosophy staying power in the minds and hearts of students is to be sure that they can directly apply the philosopher's theories to their everyday lives. I frequently remind little big minds that the point of studying philosophy is to use it as a means to improve the quality of their lives. With clear thinking, young philosophers can discover how to become an important part of the world.
(xxiv.)


Admittedly, I decided to explore the work of John Taylor Gatto because I do tend to agree with much of his criticisms of compulsory schooling. During the brief time that I taught in a public school system, the same barriers that he described clashed with what I felt to be authentic learning. Moreover, I felt that being a teacher within the public school system stunted my own ability to feel passion for learning. With the technology available now, perhaps I would be able to use these tools to more effectively teach in the spirit of what Gatto and McCarty are advocating. However, formal grades and standardized testing are two of the biggest issues I struggle with most, and there simply is no getting around these things within the institutionalized school.

Additionally, I am an inquisitive person, however, I was not taught how to be a lover of learning by having completed my education within the public school system. It is self-directed learning and exploration that motivates me. By self-directed, I mean that in order for me to be motivated, I find some component of whatever it is that I set out to learn and seek to find some aspect that will improve me as a person. For instance, I realize that I've gone a bit overboard with this particular essay in both the length and depth of my exploration of John Taylor Gatto's philosophies. I tend to do this with most things, granted I have the time to do so (and sometimes even when I really don't!) I simply do not enjoy "going through the motions" to merely complete an assignment and achieve a decent grade. In fact, it's hard for me to get motivated when I'm presented with tasks that don't allow me to be challenged me in some way. I'd go so far to say that in many instances, I resent "busy work".

I think this arises out my day-to-day life experiences growing up, and to a large extent it is influenced by the challenges I faced as a child raised in a family that was dysfunctional to the extreme. I had a handful of mentors, some of which were guerrilla teachers, that inspired me (Gatto, "Confederacy of Dunces.") However, it was not the content or subject matter that these adults shared with me; rather it was the manner in which they showed respect towards their fellow human beings in a consistent, caring, and authentic manner. Additionally, I turned to books to take me away from the harsh realities I was often forced to endure. While I am fond of saying that books saved me life, I honestly don't believe I am exaggerating. In any event, the influence that books and the experience of reading had on me as a young girl cannot be overstated. Gatto verbalizes the value of books nicely as follows:

Real books are deeply subversive of collectivization. They are the best known way to escape herd behavior, because they are vehicles transporting their reader into deep caverns of absolute solitude where nobody else can visit: No two people ever read the same great book. Real books disgust the totalitarian mind because they generate uncontrollable mental growth - and it cannot be monitored!

Television has entered the classroom because it is a collective mechanism and, as such, much superior to textbooks; similarly, slides, audio tapes, group games, and so on meet the need to collectivize, which is a central purpose of mass schooling. This is the famous "socialization" that schools do so well. Schoolbooks, on the other hand, are paper tools that reinforce school routines of close-order drill, public mythology, endless surveillance, global ranking, and constant intimidation.

(
id.)

The deep caverns of absolute solitude were exactly what I needed as a child, and since I desperately needed an escape, I was lucky to have found them. Working in a downtown urban public library, I see children everyday who are not so lucky. Gatto has given me some additional insights on how to do my part in helping these future adults.


Footnotes:


[1] Gatto uses the term "whole child" as the polar opposite of the "empty child," (Underground History).



Sources Consulted:

"Be an Architect." Sanford-artedventures.com. Sanford, a Newell Rubbermaid Company. 19 Aug 2007 <http://www.sanford-artedventures.com/play/arch2/index.html>.

Boyle, Deron R. "Sophistry, Dialectic, and Teacher Education: A Reinterpretation of Plato's Meno." Philospohy of Education 1996 102-109. 19 Aug 2007 <http://www.ed.uiuc.edu/EPS/PES-Yearbook/96_docs/boyles.html>.

Bruce, Adrian. "Symmetry Webquest." Adrian Bruce.com. 19 Aug 2007 <http://www.adrianbruce.com/Symmetry/>.

"Create a Sculpture." Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden: Education: Art Interactive. Smithsonian Institute. 19 Aug 2007 <http://hirshhorn.si.edu/education/interactive/flash.html>.

"Diane Rehm Show: Marietta McCarty: "Little Big Minds" (Rebroadcast)." Wamu.org. 28 May 2007. 18 Aug 2007 <http://www.wamu.org/programs/dr/07/05/28.php>.

"Diane Rehm Show: Marietta McCarty: "'Little Big Minds'" (Web Stream)." Wamu.org. 15 February 2007. 19 Aug 2007 <http://www.wamu.org/audio/dr/07/02/r2070215-12659.ram>.

"Downloads: Search Results: John Taylor Gatto." Altruists.org. Altruists International. 19 Aug 2007 <http://www.altruists.org/downloads/search/?restype=0&rescategory=0&resauthors=John+Taylor+Gatto&restitle=Enter+Keyword>.

"Field Trip Earth." Field Trip Earth.org. North Carolina Zoological Society. 18 Aug 2007 <http://www.fieldtripearth.org/>.

Gatto, John Taylor. "A Map, a Mirror, and a Wristwatch." SKOLE: The Journal of Alternative Education 11.22 (summer 1994): 48-69. 18 August 2007 <http://www.altruists.org/f871>.

----. "American Education History Tour: The Business of Schooling." The Odysseus Group: Challenging the Myths of Modern Schooling. 2003. The Odysseus Group. 18 Aug 2007 <http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/historytour/history4.htm>.

----. "Confederacy of Dunces: The Tyranny Of Compulsory Schooling ." Speech presented at the University in Austin, Austin, TX. 18 Aug 2007 <http://www.spinninglobe.net/condunces.htm>.

----. The Underground History of American Education: An Intimate Investigation Into the Problem of Modern Schooling. New York: Oxford Village Press & The Odysseus Group, 2001. 18 Aug 2007 <http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/chapters/index.htm>.

Lamb, PhD., Annette. "Energize Your Program: Collaborating Across the Curriculum." Activate: The Journal of Technology-Rich Learning 6.1 (winter 2006) 18 August 2007 <http://eduscapes.com/sessions/energize/index.htm>.

----. "High Tech Learning: Issues." Eduscapes.com: High Tech Learning. 2006. Eduscapes.com. 18 Aug 2007 <http://eduscapes.com/hightech/overview/legal/index.htm#0>.

----. "Keeping it real: Active learning." 2006. Eduscapes.com. 18 Aug 2007 <http://eduscapes.com/sessions/real/real1.htm>.

"Human Body Atlas." Discovery Health.com. Discovery Communications. 19 Aug 2007 <http://health.discovery.com/tools/blausen/blausen.html>.

"Kids Web Japan." Web-Japan.org. Web Japan. 18 Aug 2007 <http://web-japan.org/kidsweb/>.

"Little Big Minds." Little Big Minds.com. 18 Aug 2007 <http://www.littlebigminds.com/index.php>.

McCarty, Marietta. Little Big Minds: Sharing Philosophy with Kids. New York: Penguin Group (USA), 2006.

Pink, Daniel H.. "I'm a Saboteur." Fast Company 40 (October 2000): 242. 18 August 2007 <http://www.fastcompany.com/online/40/wf_gatto.html>.

"Virtual World: Great Barrier Reef." National Geographic.com. National Geographic. 18 Aug 2007 <http://www.nationalgeographic.com/earthpulse/reef/reef1_flash.html>.


16 August 2007

Spread the word! Save a baby bird!



A few nights ago, I was watching Dirty Jobs on the Discovery Channel. The host of Dirty Jobs, Mike Rowe, was visiting Ohio's West Sister Island to help with the annual task of banding and counting newly hatched herons. West Sister Island is an 82 acre island located within Lake Erie and is owned by the U.S. Coast Guard and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. It is managed and designated as a wilderness area and is home to a very large number of birds that are notable for their habit of vomiting and defecating from high in the trees the island. Due to this fact, West Sister Island has been nicknamed "Vomit Island."

The episode was quite entertaining (as is usual the case with Mike Rowe's adventures on Dirty Jobs). One particular scene struck me due to the fact that it brought to light the fact that something many of us were told as children is an Old Wives Tale. Namely, when a baby bird falls from its nest, I (and many kids) was told that you should leave it alone so that the mother bird does not detect the human scent on the young bird and, therefore, reject it. The truth of the matter is that you CAN handle to little chick. In fact, leaving it on the ground may very well mean that it will end up dead!

So, if you find a baby bird that has fallen from its nest, here are two good links to give you advice on what to do: http://www.raptorrehab.org/new/babyfind.htm and http://www.birdersworld.com/brd/default.aspx?c=a&id=514.

Spread the word! Save a baby bird!

23 April 2007

The Never-Ending "To Read" List


Cover of Pilgrim at Tinker Creek





In the last month, I've added at least 20 books to my "to read" list.
Three that I'm looking especially forward to are “Pilgrim at Tinker Creek” by Annie Dillard, “The Man Who Melted by Jack Dann”, and “Stolen Voices: Young People's War Diaries, from World War I to Iraq” by Olara A. Otunnu.



A co-worker and friend recommended her favorite book of all time, Annie Dillard's “Pilgrim at Tinker Creek”.



The title doesn't appeal from me--it sounds very wholesome and
“Little House on the Prairie”-ish
. However, my co-worker assures me that Pilgrim is quite beautiful and doesn't conform to any type of label that she can describe. That's enough for me to be intrigued. However, in looking a little further, I came across
Sandra Stahlman's webpage on “The Mysticism of Annie Dillard's Pilgrim at Tinker Creek”. In her essay, Ms. Stahlman concludes that:


Annie Dillard grapples with age-old questions with the knowledge and energy of a 20th century thinker. She is not limited to one religious point-of-view, and has at her disposal information from numerous fields of study. Sometimes it's as if she is burdened with the facts; knowing so much, she cannot take anything at face value, but looks from every angle, fitting the pieces to together to form a coherent picture. The nature of God, and of the human condition, does not escape her scrutiny. Annie takes the information she has acquired from her schooling and through reading many books, and mixes that together with the images she finds in nature. The result is Pilgrim at Tinker Creek - a poignant look at the mystical relationship between God and nature, and an attempt to synthesize the duality between suffering and beauty.

(My emphasis.)


I'm interested to see how far Dillard takes the “coherent picture“ and whether she sacrifices some of the mysticism in favor of establishing a sense of order.





Cover of   Stolen Voices: Young People's War Diaries, from World War I to Iraq




Another day while I was circing (rhymes with working), Stolen Voices: Young People's War Diaries, from World War I to Iraq compelled me to take a second look. R. Krithika of The Hindu eloquently states that:


Given the number of conflict-ridden areas in the world today, war has become a fact of life. Iraq, Sri Lanka, Somalia are perhaps the major war zones today. Countries like India, Pakistan and Indonesia also have areas that are prone to violent conflagrations. What is forgotten often is the impact of war on the common man. How do people live in the middle of war zones? More importantly how do children cope with the violence in their lives? Adolescents and young adults already face a tough time; what does war do to their crucial growing up years?

Stolen Voices: Young People's War Diaries from World War I to Iraq is a collection of extracts from the diaries of youngsters — teenagers to those in their early 20s. Youngsters whose lives changed suddenly through no fault of their own. This is a book that takes us right into the heart of what it means to live in the middle of violence - the fear of losing loved ones, even parents; no access to essentials like food and water; the gut-wrenching fear as you live through shelling and bombing...


I can't imagine living in this type of world as an adult. As a child, however, I find this beyond comprehension.





Cover of The Man Who   Melted




The cover of “The Man Who Melted” by Jack Dann caught my eye while checking in books in my capacity as a Circulation Associate. Thomas M. Wagner of SF Reviews.net writes:


The Man Who Melted is all about the secrets that hide beneath surfaces. It's about the way people deal with the collapse of everything that has defined their lives, and more specifically, the lies they tell themselves to avoid confronting terrible truths. Its future is one that has not fully recovered from the Great Scream, a global outbreak of collective
madness that saw millions of rioting lunatics — normal people who, as one character puts it, could not adjust to a "dysfunctional society" — come within a hair's breadth of destroying all society. But how can society be dysfunctional unless its people are dysfunctional first? The novel paints a future in which the inability of the individual to reconcile himself with society has resulted in an epidemic of schizophrenia that taps into the collective unconscious; the ironic result is that emotionally isolated individuals finally come together through
insanity and mob violence
.

(My emphasis.)


OK, Mr. Wagner, you've hooked me. Bring it on.

13 February 2007

Google and Belgian Newspaper Copyright Case: Headed for an Appeal




On February 13, 2007, Danny Sullivan of Search Engine Land reported that:



“[On re-hearing, a]… Belgium court has found that Google did violate copyright when including material from several Belgian newspapers in its search index. Google may have to pay a fine, but the ruling is far more positive for the company. Google can continue to index content without explicit permission...



Google loses copyright case launched by Belgian newspapers from the Associated Press and Google Breached Newspapers' Copyright, Court Rules from Reuters…explains that Google will have to pay a retroactively daily fine of €25,000 (about $32,000) for the it failed to remove content after Belgian newspaper group Copierpresse asked for removal of its members' material.”



Sullivan continued:



“I've just talked with Google's public relations department in Europe. Some more points on the story.



First, they are appealing the ruling. Didn't they already appeal it? No, it was a rehearing of the original case, granted because Google wasn't present to defend itself the first time. Now that the case has been reheard, an actual appeal to a higher court can happen.



* * *



I've now talked with Yoram Elkaim, legal counsel for Google who oversees Google News legal issues in Europe. First I asked more about the ruling is not seen by Google to set a precedent:



‘[Google replied], [b]ecause of the legal system in most European countries, there is no rule of precedence. That means the court here was really asked to apply the law on the specific situation and on the plaintiffs in this situation…’”



The Associated Press breaks this story down further:



“Copiepresse said the ruling was based on EU law and could trigger similar cases against Google in other nations, mentioning talks with copyright groups in Norway, Austria and Italy.



But Google said the judgment — which confirms an initial ruling in September — would not necessarily carry influence in other areas.



‘This ruling does not mean that everywhere else or every other judge in any other country would rule in the same, even in Belgium," said Yoram Elkaim, legal counsel for Google News. "There are conflicting rulings on those issues which are fairly new and complicated.’



U.S.-based technology lawyer Jonathan Band said the ruling was neither final — as it can be appealed to higher courts in Belgium — nor did it bear much weight since legal precedent is not as important in Continental European law.



‘I'm sure other newspaper publishers are probably going to read the decision carefully but the most important factor is that it's not the ultimate ruling,’ he said.



In the U.S., Internet search engines have been able to call on "fair use" to defend the republication of text excerpts and a similar system exists in British law.



‘On the Continent, they don't have that,’ he said.



Google said the court still had not settled the debate on what the ruling covered, claiming it only applied to Google News Belgium and google.be.



‘In our view we have complied with the ruling fully since September,’ Elkaim said.



If the court agrees, Google would not have to pay retroactive daily fines of €25,000 (more than US$32,000) for each day Google did not comply — far lower than an earlier judgment that threatened €1 million (US$1.3 million) a day.



But Copiepresse lawyer Bernard Magrez claimed Google was still not complying fully with the ruling — saying it covered google.com and other versions — meaning fines could run up to around €3 million (US$3.9 million) or €3.3 million (US$4.3 million).



Copiepresse is still negotiating similar copyright issues with Yahoo and MSN.”




For a look at the September 5, 2006 Order from Belgian Court, check out this link. Among other things, the Order states that:



“…[T]he defendant [is ordered] to withdraw the articles, photographs and graphic representations of Belgian publishers of the French - and German-speaking daily press, represented by the plaintiff, from all their sites (Google News and "cache" Google or any other name within 10 days of the notification of the intervening order, under penalty of a daily fine of
1,000,000.- € per day of delay”

09 February 2007

The best warm fuzzies come in unexpected packages


I work as a Circulation Associate at the Main/downtown library in my city. Admittedly, I am actively seeking a Para position within my library system, but right now I am savoring the uniqueness of working the frontlines of the library. When patrons enter the building, my co-workers and I are the first or second group of people they see (the other prominent figures are the security guards). My department deals with a lot of people, and it often seems that many of these interactions arise out of frustrations and problems that the patrons have.



For a few months now, I’ve been making an extra-conscious effort to really be present when interacting with each patron that I am interacting with. Not that I did not do this before, but I wanted to take things to the next level. It’s easier some days than others. On a very basic level, one of the things that I try to do is to picture (with my mind’s eye) my heart opening to each person and to look into the eyes of the other, if even just for a moment.



But, again, sometimes it takes a lot of effort when your mind or heart is elsewhere. A couple of days ago, while my body was at work, my mind was on Maggie Gyllenhaal’s latest movie to be released on dvd, SherryBaby (which I had watched just before leaving for work that day). Even more, I was thinking about a family matter that had recently come up...one of those things that you can’t really do anything about, but which bothers you nonetheless.



With about 3 hours left of work, I had one gentleman approach me with the problem, which explanation lasted about five minutes. Bottom line: there was a movie on his library card which he claimed HAD been returned. Although this is an estimate, of the times when patrons claim to have returned movies that are still on their records, it seems that about 80% of the movies are not on the shelves and have seemed to have disappeared into thin air. In other words, I did not expect to find the movie on the shelf, and was a bit too tired to really put a lot of effort into this quest.



However, the movie was there all along! My spirits immediately lifted and as I exited the Audiovisual department to head back to my post at the Return Desk, I announced to a co-worker that my faith in man had been restored for the evening. He laughed at me and shook his head. As I walked away, I think I could feel him smile warmly at my optimism, though.



Moments later, a young girl who I recognized as a after-school regular saw me heading down the stairs and asked if worked at the library. I let her know that I did and asked her what I could do to help her out. Suddenly, she was close to crying as she explained to me that her grandmother had let her borrow her library card to use as a computer pass and to check out some books. Somehow, she had lost the card. I brought her down to the return desk with me and had her sit down for a moment. I knelt down beside her and quietly explained that I’d make a note in grandma’s record that the card was misplaced.



To take her mind off the situation a bit, I asked the girl to write her name down for me in her very best handwriting. I then let Shae (yes, a pseudonym) that I’d write in grandma’s record that Shae could still check out some books that evening. I made a computer pass up for her, and made sure she knew that I believed losing the card was an accident. I let her know that I’d be up in the same area that she was using the computers in shortly, and that we’d keep an eye out for the card for the rest of the evening.



Shae checked back with me a few more times to see if the card had been turned in. She still seemed very worried, as she thought that grandma would need to pay for a replacement card, although I let her know that it would be free. She told me she was scared of getting in trouble and wanted me to speak to her grandma. Suddenly, it occurred to her that maybe she lost the card down the elevator shaft. I suspected this was her grasping at straws to make up any story that sounded like a plausible accident, as I had done this same things many times when I was a child. The fear of getting a spanking or even just being yelled at for being irresponsible (yet again) was enough to make me become a master storyteller. I recognized this in Shae, but followed her to the elevator shaft to check out how we might retrieve grandma’s lost card.



I assured Shae once again that accidents happen, and joked with her that next time maybe she should wear pants with pockets. I stressed that I believed she had learned an important lesson. Still, she was close to crying again. I told her that I’d write her a note to give to grandma if she gave me a few minutes to do so. I knew the note would probably do more for Shae than for grandma, but hoped that maybe Shae’s grandma would go easier on her if I stressed the fact that getting a replacement card would be easy and free. I gave the note to Shae and told her that, although I could not keep her from getting in trouble, I believed that it was an accident.



Maybe ten minutes later, Shae returned, skipping up to me with the biggest smile. The card had been found. She gave me back the note, and gave me a huge thank you.



By then, I think I was just has happy as Shae that she had found grandma’s card.

03 February 2007

So, what does David Bowie read?

On 17 January, 2007, BiblioTech Web drew attention to the fact that Art Garfunkel has an ongoing list of books he's read over the last 3 decades. Scott Pfitzinger (the author of BiblioTech Web) attributes the discovery of this gem to Steven Cohen at Library Stuff who got it from Jessa Crispin at Bookslut who got it from David at Largehearted Boy.”



Check Mr. Garfunkel's Library out for yourself! Of note is the fact that his top 5 favorite books are:



1. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, The Confessions, 1781, 606 pp. (read in Jun. 1968)

2. Erich Fromm, The Art of Loving, 1956, 146 pp. (read in Jun. 1968)

3. P.D. Ouspensky, In Search of the Miraculous, 1949, 389 pp. (read in Oct. 1968)

4. L.N. Tolstoy, War and Peace, 1869, 1444 pp. (read in Feb. 1969)

5. Philip Roth, Portnoy's Complaint, 1969, 274 pp. (read in May 1969)


Along this line, retired librarian, Glenna Nowell, is the editor of the “Who Reads What?” reading list, which began in 1988. This list features books that famous and influential people have read. In 2004, Today Show celebs Al Roker and Anne Curry were reading “Devil in a Blue Dress” by Walter Mosley and “The Once and Future King” by T.H.White, respectively. In 1994, Lamb Chop's mom, Shari Lewis, commented that, “Generally, the book I'm reading at the moment is my favorite--however, my all time fave is Return of the Native by Thomas Hardy. Great tragic strong female character, bucking the social mores.”



So, my original question was, “What does David Bowie read?” His lovely letter to Glenna Nowell says it best:



“Dear Miss Nowell:



I was so delighted to have been asked to contribute to your list as I am an obsessive reader, and, it seems to me, I spend half my life recommending books to friends--and to complete strangers at times!



However, actually putting my short list together nearly paralyzed me with indecision. I read something like three books a week, so trimming down became an exceptionally daunting prospect.



These few are works that really stayed with me and I can assure the reader of a jolly good time with any of the following. Fifth Business, The Manticore, and World of Wonders by Robertson Davies. These books form a trilogy so read them in order. Nights at the Circus by Angela Carter. Wonderfully surreal. Money by Martin Amis. Funny, bitter, extremely British. Brazzaville Beach, by William Boyd. Caring, poignant and terribly romantic. The Viveroy of Ouidah by Bruce Chatwin. One of the greatest writers of this last twenty years. Libra by Don Delillo. Alarming and American.



I should also note that if you like any of these books please don't hesitate to read the rest of the works by any of these authors. Their entire output is just great. I'd love to hear your opinion.



Please ask me for another list next year as I keep remembering works that cast their spell on my sponge-like mind.



Kind regards,



David Bowie”



Although I've only recently started, my own reading list contains books I've read, books on my “to read list”, and books I think my husband would enjoy. The service I use is called Bibliophil. I like the feature of looking for readers with similar tastes to my own where I can get even more ideas on books to add to my wishlist.

Taking RSS into your own hands

BiblioTech Web has recently featured a cool new service called Page2RSS. While most sites now provide RSS feeds, there are inevitably some out there that do not, making this tool especially useful.



Even better, it's so simple to use. You may either go right to their website and enter the webpage you want to monitor in a box that will convert the web address to RSS, or you can add a button or bookmark to your browser toolbar. Once Page2RSS has converted the web address to RSS, simply copy and paste the link into your favorite aggregator.



Being a fellow RSS Bigot , I began wandering around the web a bit to find some interesting mashups that incorporate RSS.



Something that immediately caught my eye is an RSS mashup site called BaeBo. The RSS Weblog give a great description of Baebo:



“[BaeBo]acts as a meta search engine reaching into Amazon, Google, eBay, Yahoo!, Flickr, YouTube, and Technorati. You cannot mash all the search results into one feed, but you can merge Amazon, eBay, and Yahoo! Shopping into a single product feed, which is damn convenient. The site is weak on design, but it works. Used to be called Longtail, but (according to a posted explanation) that term has been trademarked by its popularizer, Chris Anderson. The mashup site is now called BaeBo, and is operated by Fancis Shanahan. (BaeBo is the language spoken in the Solomon islands ... perhaps it has other meanings, too.)”



Apparently, BaeBo's results may also be viewed through WML on your Blackberry you feel so compelled to go that route.



RSS Alley, created by Adam Green, uses Google Maps APIy to display the locations of some companies and bloggers actively working with RSS in the Boston area. Green writes that,
“Boston has become a center for innovation based on the RSS standard, so it is fitting that it be known as RSS Alley.This map displays the locations of some of the companies, blogs, and people actively working with RSS and OPML in the Boston area.” Submissions to RSS Alley are made by sending an email to Green.



PackageMapping.com allows you to track your UPS, FedEx, USPS, and DHL packages with Google Maps and RSS feeds. You simply enter your tracking number and up pops a detailed manifest of your package's details as well as a map showing your package's route. Too cool.



Finally, SixDegrees mashes RSS feeds with the ClearForest Content Analysis Services API, finding the connection or six-degrees of separation between topics. The real value of this mashup is detailed by the author of SixDegrees, Francis Shanahan, who notes that “should you so desire, I have exposed the capabilities of the service through SOAP and REST interfaces so that developers can build on top of the data collected.” Admittedly, much of what Shanahan says about SixDegrees is over my head, but the concept sounds pretty intriguing to me.

On 26 January 2007, LibrarianActivist.org featured a game “Homelessness: It’s No Game”. It was created by a student for a graduate-level course on game design at the School of Interactive Arts and Technology at Simon Fraser University.



The game's creator states that, “The intent of the game is to raise awareness of the situation faced by the homeless, as well as to aid in my research into the effectiveness of serious videogames.”



The "Librarian Activist" went on to explain that “Although the concept has lots of potential, the execution (at least in the current version) is lacking. This Flash-based game asks you to simulate life on the streets by taking on the role of a homeless person. You wander a small area of a city picking up bottles and other items to sell, panhandling, dealing with hunger pangs and a heavy bladder, visiting parks, diners and churches while avoiding trouble and trying to earn “esteem” points by your actions. You have a 24-hour window (accelerated obviously) to earn 24 esteem points. If you do, you “win” the game. If not…well, I don’t know what happens if not since I’ve played the game four times and never “lost” once (I think my record was raising my esteem enough was before 10 hours were up out of the 24.)”



The idea of games as a catalyst for change in the real world has been taken on by the Serious Games Initiate, whose goal is:



“...to help usher in a new series of policy education, exploration, and management tools utilizing state of the art computer game designs, technologies, and development skills.



As part of that goal the Serious Games Initiative also plays a greater role in helping to organize and accelerate the adoption of computer games for a variety of challenges facing the world today.”



The Serious Games Initiative emerged in 2002 and has been evolving ever since. In 2004, a subgroup was formed called “Games for Change” (G4C) “which acts as a national hub to help organizations network and develop videogame projects beyond their traditional expertise.
Our members represent hundreds of organizations and include partners in the games industry, academia, nonprofits, local and state governments, foundations, the UN and artists.”



The 3rd annual Games for Change conference was hosted in New York City by
Parsons The New School for Design on June 27th through 28th, 2006. Apparently, this is the only conference that is strictly dedicated to the Digital Games for Social Change movement. Speakers and exhibiters at the conference included activists, non-profits, and academics, as well as game designers.



For anyone interested, on “Monday, March 5 and Tuesday, March 6 at the Moscone Convention Center North in San Francisco during GDC 2007, the Summit provides a forum for game developers and industry professionals to examine the future course of serious games development in areas such as education, government, health, military, science, corporate training, first responders, and social change.”