Graduate School of Library and Information Science, UT Austin
Information Technologies
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BOOK REVIEW

Assignment Title: Scholarly Book Review

Participation:
Part 1, critical posts: Group.
Part 2, scholarly essay: Individual.

Due dates:
Part 1, critical posts: 7 March through 4 April 2001.
Part 2, scholarly essay: 25 April 2001.

Format:
Part 1, critical posts: Three multi-parargaph discussion board posts.
Part 2, scholarly essay: Formal seven to nine page essay in APA final manuscript format.

Submission Method:
Part 1, critical posts: Discussion Board posts.
Part 2, scholarly essay: Email to the course emailbox with the essay attached as a MSWord document.

Maximum points: 20 (includes discussion board participation).

Introduction: Throughout their working life, library and information practitioners must critically consider the information they read within the context of their academic and life experiences. This assignment helps students prepare for such critical evaluation by choosing one of the books below, reading it closely, and writing an integrative critical review of it.

Goals: The goals of this assignment are as follows:

  • To understand at a selected scholars view of the impact of information technology on the information profession.

  • To gain experience critically discussing a book using electronic means.

  • To gain experience in writing critical essays of other scholars work and comparing it with the knowledge you have gained within and outside this course. To meet this goal, simple summaries are not sufficient to meet the requirements of this assignment. Your review must be analytic, evaluative, and, to the extent appropriate, comparative.

Tasks: For this assignment you will:

  1. Early in the course, choose one of the books from the following two and post your choice on the discussion board. Since there are ten students in the class and there needs to be a critical number for a good discussion, each book will be selected by five students. Please select a book you have not already read. If you have read both of them please let the TA know.

  2. Author
    Title
    Borgman From Gutenberg to the Global Information Infrastructure: Access to Information in the Networked World (2000)
    Winograd and Flores Understanding Computers and Cognition: A New Foundation for Design (1986)

  3. Read the book closely considering the viewpoint of the author in the context of other things you have learned inside and outside of this class.

  4. Discuss the contents of the book with others who have chosen it. The TAs will provide discussion subtopics under the monograph discussion topic on the discussion board.

    • Post at least three substantial, multi-paragraph contributions to the discussion board about the book being reviewed between the dates listed above. Students failing to make these substantial contributions in that time will not be allowed to submit the review, nor will they be allowed to complete the course.

    • For maximum points you should respond to the posts of others in your group (or to other group if you have read those books also).

  5. Write your essay and email it to the course emailbox as a MSWord attachment.

    • Be sure to review the book that was written, not the book that was not; be evaluative, but not dismissive.

    • Identify specific strengths and weaknesses of the book being reviewed and state explicitly why they are strengths and weaknesses.

    • Put the book in the context of its importance and/or connection to information technology and the class as a whole. This section should be the longest part of your paper.

    • Feel free to refer to any other material with which you are familiar, whether read for this course or not, if you believe that it applies to your review. Be sure to document this other material fully and formally.

 

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  Foundations II: l38613dw@gslis.utexas.edu
Website Info: www@gslis.utexas.edu

Last updated 30 January 2001 by Don Drumtra