Information Technology

http://chronicle.com/free/v51/i33/33a03401.htm

>From the issue dated April 22, 2005
Knowing When to Log Off

Wired campuses may be causing 'information overload'

By JEFFREY R. YOUNG

David M. Levy, a computer scientist who loves technology and gets more than
100 e-mail messages a day, makes a point of unplugging from the Internet one
day each week to clear his head. Even so, with all the e-mail messages
flooding in, with academic blogs bursting with continuous debate, and with
the hectic pace set by an increasingly wired world, Mr. Levy says he cannot
help but feel an occasional sense of information overload.

And that, he says, is something to stop and think about.

Mr. Levy, a professor at the University of Washington's Information School,
is one of many scholars trying to raise awareness of the negative impact of
communication technologies on people's lives and work. They say the quality
of research and teaching at colleges is at risk unless scholars develop
strategies for better managing information, and for making time for
extensive reading and contemplation.

"We're losing touch with the contemplative roots of scholarship, the
reflective dimension," says Mr. Levy. "When you think that universities are
meant to be in effect the think tanks for the culture, or at least one of
the major forms of thinking, that strikes me as a very serious concern."

At Washington, Mr. Levy is working to create a laboratory to explore those
issues, to be called the Center for Information and the Quality of Life. He
received a $25,000 grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur
Foundation to help plan the center, though he is still looking for support
for its operation.

He and other scholars have already started a dialogue on the topic. Last
year Mr. Levy organized a conference at the university called "Information,
Silence, and Sanctuary" that brought together artists, philosophers,
sociologists, and others, and was supported by the university and by grants
from MacArthur and the National Science Foundation.

Mr. Levy hopes the conversations will grow into a new kind of movement
focused on people's informational environments and on reducing data smog.

Scholars are beginning to realize "that our information ecology is
endangered as well," says Mr. Levy. "We're just at the very beginning of
even being clear about the nature of what the problems are."

'Not Anti-E-Mail'

Colleges were early in embracing the Internet and other communication
technologies, and campuses remain some of the most wired environments
anywhere. Although many professors say the Internet has enhanced their
teaching and scholarship -- by better connecting them with colleagues around
the world, by providing easier access to research materials, and by
increasing contact with students -- it has also brought new challenges, such
as keeping online tasks from becoming unwieldy.

"When I sit down at a conference or lunch with a colleague, there's a pretty
good chance we'll talk about being overwhelmed by e-mail and what we're
doing about it," says Buzz Alexander, an English professor at the University
of Michigan at Ann Arbor. "I'm not anti-e-mail. I'm advantaged and
disadvantaged by e-mail like everybody else."

On the syllabus for his course "What Is Literature?" he tells students not
to contact him by e-mail. He says he tries to make sure he is available for
one-on-one meetings to respond to any questions -- after class, during his
office hours, or over coffee. "If they're in my office," he says, "I can say
to them, 'How are you liking the course?' or 'How are things going?'" And he
worries that he would not be able to keep up with a flood of e-mail
questions from students who expect an instant response.

Bill McKibben, a scholar in residence in environmental studies at Middlebury
College, says the issue is more than just one of time management.

"There's the real danger that one is absorbing and responding to bursts of
information, rather than having time to think," says Mr. McKibben, author of
Enough: Staying Human in an Engineered Age (Times Books, 2003). "What's only
gradually becoming clear is not just a pragmatic drawback but an
intellectual drawback to having so many trees that there's no possibility of
seeing the forest."

He says he is not immune from feelings of information overload, and that he
has tried to work out strategies for dealing with the flood of communication
he gets each day. When he is working on a book or is near a deadline, for
instance, he only checks his e-mail messages once a day, in the evening. And
he uses a slow dial-up connection at home, even though he could afford a
faster broadband service, so that he is less tempted to surf the Web.

"I think part of it is that my mind, and perhaps human minds in general, are
geared toward novelty, and so it's difficult to discipline yourself to
disregard each new incoming e-mail and each new incoming thing that you can
instantly track down and print out," he says.

Some scholars worry that even tools meant to help home in on specific
information could have a negative impact on research.

For instance, Michael Gorman, president-elect of the American Library
Association and dean of library services at California State University at
Fresno, wants to make sure students and professors do not become so
enthralled with Google, which plans to scan millions of books and add them
to its popular search engine, that they stop reading books the old-fashioned
way.

"We all know that, in Googleworld, speed is of the essence, but it is not to
most scholarly research in the real world," Mr. Gorman wrote in a recent
editorial in the Los Angeles Times. "Massive databases of digitized whole
books, especially scholarly books, are expensive exercises in futility based
on the staggering notion that, for the first time in history, one form of
communication (electronic) will supplant and obliterate all previous forms."

In an interview, Mr. Gorman stressed that he is not against technology, and
that he is a strong supporter of digital-library projects for special
collections and rare materials. "I'm all in favor of technology being used
wisely," he said. "My basic point is the best thing to do with a scholarly
book is to sit and read it," rather than skim an excerpt that is revealed by
a search engine. "A book is not just an accumulation of facts, it's an
argument, a cumulative piece of knowledge, and is designed to be read
sequentially."

Stopping to Think

Since students are generally even more wired than professors, some college
officials think students should be encouraged to take some time away from
computers, cellphones, and other communication devices.

"The amount of information that goes into a young person's head today is
incredible," says David H. Landers, director of the student resource center
at Saint Michael's College, in Colchester, Vt. His main concern is that
students have replaced face-to-face contact with instant messaging and
e-mail. "They're not going to have the same quality of interpersonal
relations that will help them in a work environment," he argues.

He says colleges should encourage students to get involved in community
projects where they see what life is like outside of their high-tech campus
bubble. "We recognize technology," he says, "but we can't become slaves to
it."

David Rothenberg, a professor of philosophy at the New Jersey Institute of
Technology, took a novel approach to fighting overload in a class he taught
called "Technology and Contemplation." He used a few minutes of each class
session to have students meditate.

"If you stop talking and have people sit silently for five minutes, that's a
good use of time because people are so stressed out," he says. "It really
had a positive effect." He says he is no expert on meditation, and that the
bulk of the class dealt with texts that looked at the differences and
similarities between technical thinking and contemplative thinking. He tried
the techniques with the support of a small grant from the Center for
Contemplative Mind in Society, a secular nonprofit group.

Mr. Levy says his weekly day off from technology is part of his observation
of the Jewish Sabbath (his wife is a rabbi), but that he recommends time
away from computer monitors as a practice in itself. "I'm not suggesting
that anyone else be Jewish," he says, "but rather if you think about the
idea of the Sabbath, which is a time apart, a time to cultivate different
qualities, that seems like a very important idea for our culture."

He says information overload is one aspect of a larger problem that includes
"fragmented attention, busyness, and the speed-up of daily life."

"It isn't just the amount of information," he argues. "It's the expectation
that we're going to go faster and faster and faster."

Arthur G. Zajonc, a physics professor at Amherst College who is also
director of the academic program for the Center for Contemplative Mind in
Society, says many people take pride in replying to e-mail messages
instantly, leading them to dash off terse, often uncivil, responses. He says
he makes it a point to pause and rethink his outgoing e-mail messages for 30
seconds before sending them, to make sure he hasn't been overly curt.
"Everything is so fast and also a little bit anonymous" with e-mail, he
says. "So you have to pause to reflect on who this person is" that will be
reading the message and how they might perceive it.

Broader Issues

Academics are not the only ones feeling overwhelmed, of course, and a
growing number of researchers are looking at technology's impacts on the
quality of life outside of colleges.

Norman H. Nie, director of the Stanford Institute for the Quantitative Study
of Society, at Stanford University, found in a recent survey that Internet
use tends to cut into family time, and can lead to feelings of isolation.
For the average respondent, an hour on the Internet reduced face-to-face
time with family by 23.5 minutes per day, he says.

"It's not whether to use the Internet or not use the Internet," said Mr. Nie
in an interview. "It's how much time we really spend on it. Time is a
hydraulic system. If you spend two hours doing one thing, you can't spend it
doing something else."

Mr. Nie admits to a fair amount of Internet use himself, and says he feels
it has changed his habits, perhaps cutting into some leisure time.

Eric Brende became so fed up with technology that he quit his graduate
studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology a few years ago to
spend 18 months living with his wife in a rural farming community. (He
wouldn't say where exactly to protect the identities of the people he wrote
about.) He argues that the negative aspects of using technology have become
so great that we would all be better off giving up nearly all modern devices
-- including washing machines, lawn mowers, and cars. He published a book
about his experiences and beliefs, called Better Off: Flipping the Switch on
Technology (HarperCollins, 2004).

He argues that living more simply actually yields more leisure time, and
forces people to forge greater bonds with neighbors because of a greater
need for cooperation (such as for the occasional barn raising). And he notes
that not enough people are looking critically at the impact of technology.
"Whatever impact it's having," he says, "people are overlooking the negative
aspects of it, one of which is, I think, a loss of a sense of leisure and
contemplation."

Mr. Brende, who now lives in St. Louis, has not completely switched off
technology, though. He said in an interview that he occasionally checks
e-mail messages at a nearby public library, and that he even has a
cellphone, which helps him coordinate his work as a part-time
bicycle-rickshaw driver. "You're not being disloyal to progress," he said,
"by picking and choosing the kind of technology that best fits your needs."
http://chronicle.com
Section: Information Technology
Volume 51, Issue 33, Page A34 



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