FWIW, a few years ago, my university library gutted its down floor, put in a 
coffee bar and IT stuff, and called itself the “academic commons.”  Seems like 
a fad in Library Land.  

 

Nick 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
ERIC P. CHARLES
Sent: Monday, May 16, 2011 9:43 AM
To: Victoria Hughes
Cc: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Fwd: Seth Godin : The future of the library

 

Nice article,
We at Altoona are looking for a new head librarian. For the past three days, I 
have attended talks by candidates. The consensus seems to be that he university 
library of the future will be a "knowledge commons". It is a awkward term, and 
not one speaker started out by explaining what a "commons" is. The idea seems 
to be a technology equipped student-union type study space, with help desks. 
The one redeeming notion was a shift of resources from acquisitions to human 
capital. This, because students still need help to lean about what resources to 
use, how to use, etc., plus a full range of technology help. Thus the library 
has no future (if a library is seen as a place where libres are stored), but 
the librarian might well have a very good future (with a very antiquated job 
title). One example was about how incredibly easy it is to get free newspaper 
content in real time, but how hard it is to research a newspaper story from 5 
months ago. There were also some good ideas about integrating librarians into 
classroom instruction as new tech became available and methods of use needed to 
be taught to both students and professors. 

Eric

On Mon, May 16, 2011 10:37 AM, Victoria Hughes <[email protected]> wrote:




Interesting perspective on the role of the librarian versus collection of print 
books.







 
<http://feedproxy.google.com/%7Er/typepad/sethsmainblog/%7E3/9_9r8XmwMTU/the-future-of-the-library.html>
 The future of the library


What is a public library for?

First, how we got here:

Before Gutenberg, a book cost about as much as a small house. As a result, only 
kings and bishops could afford to own a book of their own.

This naturally led to the creation of shared books, of libraries where scholars 
(everyone else was too busy not starving) could come to read books that they 
didn't have to own. The library as warehouse for books worth sharing.

Only after that did we invent the librarian.

The librarian isn't a clerk who happens to work at a library. A librarian is a 
data hound, a guide, a sherpa and a teacher. The librarian is the interface 
between reams of data and the untrained but motivated user.

After Gutenberg, books  got a lot cheaper. More individuals built their own 
collections. At the same time, though, the number of titles exploded, and the 
demand for libraries did as well. We definitely needed a warehouse to store all 
this bounty, and more than ever we needed a librarian to help us find what we 
needed. The library is a house for the librarian.

Industrialists (particularly Andrew Carnegie) funded the modern American 
library. The idea was that in a pre-electronic media age, the working man 
needed to be both entertained and slightly educated. Work all day and become a 
more civilized member of society by reading at night.

And your kids? Your kids need a place with shared encyclopedias and plenty of 
fun books, hopefully inculcating a lifelong love of reading, because reading 
makes all of us more thoughtful, better informed and more productive members of 
a civil society.

Which was all great, until now.

Want to watch a movie? Netflix is a better librarian, with a better library, 
than any library in the country. The Netflix librarian knows about every movie, 
knows what you've seen and what you're likely to want to see. If the goal is to 
connect viewers with movies, Netflix wins.

This goes further than a mere sideline that most librarians resented anyway. 
Wikipedia and the huge databanks of information have basically eliminated the 
library as the best resource for anyone doing amateur research (grade school, 
middle school, even undergrad). Is there any doubt that online resources will 
get better and cheaper as the years go by? Kids don't shlep to the library to 
use an out of date encyclopedia to do a report on FDR. You might want them to, 
but they won't unless coerced.

They need a librarian more than ever (to figure out creative ways to find and 
use data). They need a library not at all.

When kids go to the mall instead of the library, it's not that the mall won, 
it's that the library lost.

And then we need to consider the rise of the Kindle. An ebook costs about $1.60 
in 1962 dollars. A thousand ebooks can fit on one device, easily. Easy to 
store, easy to sort, easy to hand to your neighbor. Five years from now, 
readers will be as expensive as Gillette razors, and ebooks will cost less than 
the blades.

Librarians that are arguing and lobbying for clever ebook lending solutions are 
completely missing the point. They are defending library as warehouse as 
opposed to fighting for the future, which is librarian as producer, concierge, 
connector, teacher and impresario.

Post-Gutenberg, books are finally abundant, hardly scarce, hardly expensive, 
hardly worth warehousing. Post-Gutenberg, the scarce resource is knowledge and 
insight, not access to data.

The library is no longer a warehouse for dead books. Just in time for the 
information economy, the library ought to be the local nerve center for 
information. (Please don't say I'm anti-book! I think through my actions and 
career choices, I've demonstrated my pro-book chops. I'm not saying I wantpaper 
to go away, I'm merely describing what's inevitably occurring). We all love the 
vision of the underprivileged kid bootstrapping himself out of poverty with 
books, but now, (most of the time) the insight and leverage is going to come 
from being and fast and smart with online resources, not from hiding in the 
stacks.

The next library is a place, still. A place where people come together to do 
co-working and coordinate and invent projects worth working on together. Aided 
by a librarian who understands the  <http://meshing.it/book> Mesh, a librarian 
who can bring domain knowledge and people knowledge and access to information 
to bear.

The next library is a house for the librarian with the guts to invite kids in 
to teach them how to get better grades while doing less grunt work. And to 
teach them how to use a soldering iron or take apart something with no user 
servicable parts inside. And even to challenge them to teach classes on their 
passions, merely because it's fun. This librarian takes responsibility/blame 
for any kid who manages to graduate from school without being a first-rate data 
shark.

The next library is filled with so many web terminals there's always at least 
one empty. And the people who run this library don't view the combination of 
access to data and connections to peers as a sidelight--it's the entire point.

Wouldn't you want to live and work and pay taxes in a town that had a library 
like that? The vibe of the best Brooklyn coffee shop combined with a passionate 
raconteur of information? There are one thousands things that could be done in 
a place like this, all built around one mission: take the world of data, 
combine it with the people in this community and create value.

We need librarians more than we ever did. What we don't need are mere clerks 
who guard dead paper. Librarians are too important to be a dwindling voice in 
our culture. For the right librarian, this is the chance of a lifetime.

 
<http://feeds.feedburner.com/%7Eff/typepad/sethsmainblog?a=9_9r8XmwMTU:tc6d6jGRxI8:yIl2AUoC8zA>
   
<http://feeds.feedburner.com/%7Eff/typepad/sethsmainblog?a=9_9r8XmwMTU:tc6d6jGRxI8:qj6IDK7rITs>
  

  <http://feeds.feedburner.com/%7Er/typepad/sethsmainblog/%7E4/9_9r8XmwMTU> 

 

 

 

 
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Eric Charles

Professional Student and
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Penn State University
Altoona, PA 16601



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