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Information Technologies and the Information Professions

School of Information

The University of Texas

Summer 2005

 

Unique Number: 81360

Class time: None (Web-Based)

Instructor: Danielle Cunniff Plumer

Email: dcplumer <at> ischool.utexas.edu
Office: 562AA
Office Hours: By appointment
Virtual Office Hours (Blackboard): Mon.-Fri., 10-11 a.m. and by appt.
Telephone: (512) 508-3099 (mobile); (512) 471-3821 (Main iSchool office)
Please use my mobile number only for emergencies!

Note: This class is required for all students who entered the School of Information prior to Fall 2004. It is OPTIONAL for students entering in Fall 2004.

Course Description

This course will provide an overview of the history of information technology, broadly conceived. We will look specifically at the ways in which information professionals, and people generally, have produced and shared information, identifying changes and transitions in the mode and medium of such production, from orality to literacy, from script to print, and from analog to digital.

We will also investigate the role of the information professional in identifying, initiating, anticipating, and reacting to such changes. As future leaders in your profession, you will be expected to implement and evaluate applications, develop highly technical skills, and create strategic technology plans. This course will help to prepare you for that role through various individual and group assignments.

This is not a skills class. Although we will discuss and use specific technologies, such as HTML and its variants, the focus of the course will be on the role of these technologies in the information professions, not on the skills themselves. Other venues, such as informal workshops taught by the School of Information IT Lab staff, the General Libraries, and ACITS are more appropriate if you feel that you would benefit from skills instruction.

Blackboard: http://courses.utexas.edu/

Important Change: Class work will be submitted in Blackboard. Note that we may experience some technical glitches, which we will work together to resolve! We have the option in Blackboard of using an internal messaging feature, which will replace all email in the class. Except in emergencies, email should not be sent to my personal email. I will check my Bb messages folder several times a day, so you should not worry that I won't see your message.

Email List: i380k-dcp@lists.cc.utexas.edu

As a backup measure only, we will have a class email list. Students should sign up for this email list by sending an email to the instructor or by emailing listproc@lists.cc.utexas.edu with no subject and the single line "subscribe i380k-dcp yourfirstname yourlastname"

Course Links

Grading Standards (DCP) | Web Presentation Template

Assignments

There will be two written assignments plus two online assignments. Assignments will be submitted using the "Assignments" feature of Blackboard, with the exception of the Web-based Presentation and a few of the online exercises. Email attachments of assignments is not permitted except in unusual circumstances and must be approved in advance. Assignments are due by midnight on the date indicated.

Assignment

Date Due

Percent of Grade

Online assignment 1: Personal Information
Students will verify their personal information, including email, in Blackboard and UT Direct; construct a basic homepage for themselves on Blackboard; and complete a short skills questionnaire.

June 06
5%

Online Assignment 2: Journaling through Blogs
Students will complete a series of 20 questions plus 5 additional postings in blog-format, using Blackboard. The questions themselves may require online research and/or tutorials to complete.

July 05
45%

Written Assignment 2: New Potentials in Information Technology (5-7 pages)
Students will research a current problem with Information Technology related to the students' areas of interest.

June 10
15%

Web-based Presentation of Research
Students will have to revise and post their papers in HTML. Students who are unfamiliar with HTML should familiarize themselves with it; converting files via Microsoft Word or FrontPage will not be acceptable.

June 20
July 01 (eval)
10%

Technology Plan (10-12 pages)
Students will create a technology plan based on a real or invented scenario they will provide. Additional dues dates for this assignment will be listed on the syllabus and the assignment description. This will NOT be a group assignment.

June 17 (RFP)
June 24 (draft)
July 8 (final)
25%

Required Texts

Ong, Walter J. (1982). Orality and literacy: The technologizing of the word. London: Routledge. (or similar edition).

A selection of readings, available via the UT Library’s E-Res system.

Sources of Current Awareness

These are sources that you might want to visit periodically to keep up to date with IT trends and topics. I strongly encourage you to experiment with news aggregators as a way of keeping current (see Dave Winer's definition and an article on "Blogs and News Aggregators without the Aggravation (and Only a Little Serendipity)" from the Exploded Library blog).

  • Google News - A light-weight news aggregator
  • Yahoo! News - A light-weight news aggregator with some customization allowed through My Yahoo!
  • Slashdot - Slashdot is kind of a moderated blog; it can seem overwhelming, so you need to learn to skim it.
  • CNET.com - A good source of tech-specific news
  • The New York Times - Registration required, but the "Technology" page is often worth reading
  • Wired News - Another good source of tech news, plus a lot of the content from the print publication

Blogs

Blogs can be a good source of current awareness, but you need to be cautious with them, as some are more authoritative than others. These are some of my favorites; please add your own.

  • Feedster is a new search engine for blogs. Great for when you remember that you read something, but you can't remember where!
  • LISNews.com - A nice library-oriented blog
  • Library Stuff - Somewhat more technically oriented, but still focuses mainly on libraries
  • ia/, a great source of information architecture news.
  • Lou Rosenfeld's bloug, another information architecture source.
  • Jakob Nielsen's Alertbox, for usability posts.
  • Boxes and Arrows, a great source for usability and information architecture advice.
  • Boing Boing Blog, one of the most-read blogs on the net, is just plain fun.
  • LawMeme, a source of current legal news.
  • Lessig blog, by Larry Lessig at Stanford, has tech-related legal musings.
  • Booklab II, "visions and innovations for the traditional book," shares news about book history and technology.
  • Gary Frost's Future of the Book, "preservation and persistence of the changing book," focuses on the future of the codex book.

Cartoons

  • User Friendly - A very "geek friendly" strip
  • Dilbert - Sometimes geeky, sometimes corporate, often funny
  • Unshelved - A comic strip about a library. Frighteningly true-to-life!

If you have other favorite online sources, please share them with me at dcplumer <at> ischool.utexas.edu!