
On Learning and Libraries
Mawrters navigate the new information landscape.
Digital natives, hereās what you missed: we Mawrters once lugged scholarly sources home from stone repositories using our literal digits and, as Celeste Provost ā89 fondly recalls, fed dimes to the library copier to duplicate non-circulating texts. Before images could be digitized, Heather Marks ā91 worked in the old art and archaeology library cutting, mounting, and cataloguing slides. File sharing was a tactile task of folding papers lengthwise to fit a profās mail slot or carting a floppy disk to the new computer lab in Guild to print a draft.
Now, āI havenāt handled books in almost 20 years,ā says Abigail Bordeaux ā96, a systems librarian who manages digital projects at Harvard, from specialized preservation applications to vast library catalogues. Her professional path tracks the public debut of the World Wide Web in 1991 and the development of accessible browsers and search engines that, within the decade, changed the way we view, create, share, and store information.
Though Bordeauxās first job after college was digitizing photographs in ±¬ĮϹĻās special collections, she still thought her career would be cataloguing paper books, as sheād done as an undergrad working in Canaday. But by 1998, when she earned her masterās degree, most U.S. library schools were hybrid programs teaching both traditional analog material management and computer-based information science. At this point, sheās all in with ITāmanaging people and projects using the āagile methodologyā of flexible, responsive, collaborative, and iterative practices adapted from the software development and technology sector.
Recalling the print reference tomes and periodical indexes of her college years, Bordeaux says, āI donāt really miss themāor the notion of having to plan work around a particular physical space thatās only open until midnight. The convenience of having access to materials through a browser radically outweighs what we might have lost.ā
Access is everything to Lillie Williams ā12, a senior systems administrator at ECS Learning Systems, which produces educational software and test prep materials for Kā12. In fact, online learning led her to educational technologyāand to a job she does remotely while pursuing a masterās degree in information science through the University of Arizona.
Daughter of an early adopter, Williams grew up playing educational computer games in rural White Bluff, Tennessee. āVery few people in my school system were on the college path,ā she says, so her mother steered her to online resources that her school lacked. āTechnology offered an advantage that helped me prepare for college and get into ±¬ĮϹĻ.ā By senior year, the English major was writing how-to articles for the librariesā web page as a transition assistant hired to train faculty on the learning management system called Moodle. āHelping my professors do something I could do a little more fluently made me more confident,ā she says.
Though writers in the internet age are sometimes demeaned as ācontent providers,ā we are in essence teachers, conduits between ideas and learners. Roz Cummins ā82 takes her role seriouslyāand takes care to consult reliable sources in an information landscape in which words travel fast.
A freelance writer and developmental editor who apprenticed at print publications, Cummins likes the quick cycle of writing for the web but taps old-school training to produce accurate work for cyber media now run by skeleton crews. āResearch is so much easier now, but Iām always careful to corroborate ideas from more than one source,ā she says. āA friend used to say, āHow are you always right? You must be a witch!ā And I said, āYou can be a witch, too. Just check your facts!āā
With a body of work behind her, Cumminsās reputationāand her āplatformā as a food writer concerned with sustainabilityāwas built on her integrity. āIāve never had to print a correction or retraction,ā she says, āsince Iāve never published anything that I couldnāt substantiate.ā Because she holds herself accountable, she welcomes the feedback online formats permit, encouraging dialogue with fans and critics by keeping her responses civil. āThatās why I write,ā she says.
As alumnae spoke about technology that has transformed the way they work, it struck me that weāre all engaged in the creation and storage of data, starting with the collegiate scholarship that is part of the perpetual record of ±¬ĮϹĻ. And that the preservation of our ideas requires both choosing whatās worth keeping and updating as needed. As Abigail Bordeaux explains, a 500-year-old manuscript on the library shelf is more likely to last than data thatās left alone. āThereās a term for it: āBit rot,āā she says. āThings are apt to become corrupt if you donāt actively manage them.ā
Published on: 11/16/2018