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Transitions & Transformations in Research Libraries Towards the Information Ecology Michael Ridley Chief Information Officer (CIO) & Chief Librarian University of Guelph McMaster University September 14, 2006
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Information Ecology “When simple change becomes transformational change, the desire for continuity becomes a dysfunctional mirage.” The Mirage of Continuity (1999) Hawkins & Battin
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Information Ecology Why the “Information Ecology?” An environmental metaphor that connotes: Organic and Deliberate Interdependent and Diverse Fragile and Strong Nurture rather than build.
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Information Ecology Stewardship Democracy Service Rationalism Privacy Equity of Access Intellectual Freedom Literacy and Learning Our Enduring Values
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Information Ecology Two Major Transformations to Environment a) Managed Digital Space b) Academic Town Square 1. From database/repository Towards the Information Ecology
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Information Ecology Two Major Transformations to Information Finding People 2. From people finding information a) Ubiquitous Content & Access b) Personalized Tools Towards the Information Ecology
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Information Ecology Paul Saffo Institute for the Future “The future belongs to neither the conduit or content players, but to those who control the filtering, searching and sense-making tools we will rely on to navigate through the expanses of cyberspace.” filtering, searching and sense-making tools
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Information Ecology Library Organization Faculty & Students of the University Library Services Collections Staff
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Information Ecology Library Organization
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Information Ecology What Happened? Collections: digital, collective, ubiquitous, shared Services: collaborative, integrated, networked Staff: specialized, diverse, team-based, learners Faculty & Students: nomadic, cross institutional, global, expanded Massive interdependence
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Information Ecology
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Collaboration
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Information Ecology Collaboration
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Information Ecology Nurturing Collaborative Capacity Collaboration is a muscle. trust through shared vision & experience high tolerance for difference & ambiguity unrelenting focus on institutional mission managed self-interest practicing the art of the possible
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Information Ecology “Culture eats strategy for lunch every day of the week.” Elson Floyd, President University of Missouri Reality Check
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Small changes Big impacts
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Information Ecology Street Cred … What about Guelph?
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Information Ecology Innovation & Change Learning Commons Library as Publisher Librarians as Teaching Faculty TUG: Tri University Group of Libraries Canadian Research Knowledge Network, Scholarsportal & Alouette Canada
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Information Ecology Two Major Transformations to Environment a) Managed Digital Space b) Academic Town Square 1. From database/repository Towards the Information Ecology to Information Finding People 2. From people finding information a) Ubiquitous Content & Access b) Personalized Tools
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Information Ecology Your Moment of Zen... “To remain what it is, the library must change...... if it does not change, it will not remain what it is.” David Penniman University at Buffalo
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Information Ecology The demise of the Titanic was brought about by the As we build the future of research libraries, are we thinking about airplanes or icebergs? In the final analysis the Titanic was not sunk by an iceberg. rise of commercial air travel. A Cautionary Tale...
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Transitions & Transformations in Research Libraries Towards the Information Ecology Michael Ridley Chief Information Officer (CIO) & Chief Librarian University of Guelph McMaster University September 14, 2006
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