Posts tagged as:

library

More Words on the Library Debate

by NYC Private Schools on February 14, 2010

Back in the fall of last year, we reported on the Cushing Academy, the first school to officially changeover its library to all digital. The transformation of this school’s library, complete with big screen TV’s and a $12,000 coffee maker, began to stir up more and controversy not because if its singular decision but because of the possible beginning or end that it signifies.

The New York Times ran an Opinion piece on Cushing Academy and invited the headmaster, James Tracy, as well as various authors and librarians and other relevant to the debate to weigh in on the written and digitized word.

The Cushing Academy Headmaster of course reinforced his ideas on the future and a digitized library, with smart commentary on the fact that a library must reflect the learning ways of the people it serves.

Cushing Academy Headmaster James Tracy
small collection of printed books no longer supports the type of research required by a
21st century curriculum. We wanted to create a library that reflected the reality of how students do research and fostered what they do, one that went beyond stacks and stacks of underutilized books.

Others brought up very real arguments of the tactile and personal nature of a physical book and wonder if it can ever really be replaced.

Author Nicolas Carr
The pages of a book shield us from the distractions that bombard us during most of our waking hours. As an informational medium, the book focuses our attention, encouraging the kind of immersion in a story or an argument that promotes deep comprehension and deep learning.

Author William Powers
embracing these new tools doesn’t require us to simultaneously throw out all the old ones, particularly those that continue to serve useful purposes. Who says it has to be an either-or decision?

The idea that books are outdated is based on a common misconception: the belief that new technologies automatically render existing ones obsolete, as the automobile did with the buggy whip. However, this isn’t always the case. Old technologies often handily survive the introduction of new ones, and sometimes become useful in entirely new ways.

The debate continues on the increased digitization of our libraries, but most agree at this point that an evolution in our libraries is happening, and how we work with it and mould it to our own needs and purposes will be the mark of its success.


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Evolution of the Library

by NYC Private Schools on January 26, 2010

The technology in our children’s classrooms is constantly changing, but few places is that evolution more apparent than in the libraries. As adults, we expect changes in how classrooms look and feel and show surprisingly little reaction to advances made, but the almost sacred grounds of the library are often a focal point for parent’s recognition of change.

Libraries Anchored in a Sea of Change

Why are libraries so often the first thing people think of when they discuss changes in schools? Maybe it is because the library was one of the few areas in our own youths that did not change. Books, books and more books, on every shelf and in every row, broken up only occasionally by some clunky, seldom used audio/visual equipment. The library, for many adults, did not change throughout their generation.

There are still books in rows and shelves, but the ability to gain incalculable access in unprecedented time has re-made how information is gained and processed. Library technology has become a powerful tool instead of a den of information locked inside a card catalog. Card catalogs have made their way to Library catalogs, which include millions of E-texts and fast access to materials from other libraries and collections. Cross referencing and searching put the information you need at your fingertips. Thanks to tireless work by thousands, much printed work is now available on the internet, broadening a library’s catalog from what is on the shelves to what is on everyone’s shelves.

A Gathering for Debate

For decades, libraries had become slightly darkened, greatly hushed dens for study, research and learning. The new generation library resembles more of a gathering of debaters and philosophers, with a dynamic learning process that takes full advantage of what history has brought to the table. Discussion and debate are once again common sights in libraries across the world, a visible reminder of the continued evolution of education.


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Private School Library Goes All Digital, with Coffee

November 6, 2009

The Cushing Academy in Massachusetts has the distinction, for good or ill, of becoming to first school to change its library completely over to digital. USAnewstoday.com featured a story on the school who’s library now consists of computers and a lot of loaned out Kindles.
Library watchers say it could be the first school [...]

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School Libraries Brave the Future

September 6, 2009

Many NYC Private Schools have been spending a large portion of their funding to upgrade and modernize their libraries and media centers. The libraries that previous generations were familiar with are changing, morphing, moving fast to both take advantage of and keep up with the pace of available technology.
For those who believe that digitizing [...]

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