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Turning The Page: SLJ Celebrates 50 Years

E-books will have a more profound effect on librarians than the invention of the printing press

By Doug Johnson -- School Library Journal, 11/1/2004

Also in this article:
The E-Book of 2015 
Sources 

The technology of the book has gone through a number of transitions in its long history--from clay to wax to papyrus to vellum to cloth to paper. Books have been stored as tablets, scrolls, and folios, and they've been bound in horn, leather, cloth, and paper. The role of the librarian has changed as well--from scribe to guard to copyist to archivist to selector to teacher.

I'm already looking forward to the next iteration, when well-designed books made of silicon, plastic, and metal will replace cellulose as the reading materials of choice. Why? Paper books disintegrate. They go out of print. They're expensive to produce, bulky to store, and back breaking to move. Their very physical nature means that access to them is limited. While I'm sentimental about the memories that particular books have evoked in me, it's really the excitement of the story, the perspective of the author, and the lyricism of the language that I'm reacting to when I say, "I love books."

The wide-scale use of the mature e-book will have a more profound--and far more sudden--effect on the role of the librarian than the invention of the printing press. Furthermore, this revolution will occur within many of our working lifetimes. Just as printed books replaced hand-copied manuscripts, freeing books from the chains that once bound them to library tables, e-books will free the content of books from any particular physical space. How will e-books change our workspaces, tools, and jobs?

The physical library. While homeschooling and virtual schooling are growing in popularity, they serve only a small fraction of students in preschool through high school. Most families expect schools to shelter their children as well as to educate them. But will the library remain a physical entity when all of its resources are accessible via an affordable, practical e-book?

The library of the future will house the technology infrastructure needed to ensure that e-books are connected to each other and the rest of the world. It's also the logical place to house the technical staff which will supervise e-books. A production lab equipped with powerful computers that perform high-end, graphic-editing, video-processing, and number-crunching tasks will also be part of tomorrow's library.

But if we want the library to remain as a physical learning space, we must create facilities and environments that kids and teachers want to visit. That means the library must have comfortable chairs; a pleasant ambience; and a friendly, low-stress, safe, and forgiving atmosphere--and, yes, a coffee shop. The library must also have flexible spaces that can be used by individuals, small groups, and entire classes. Conventional books that have value but haven't yet been digitized may remain on library shelves, but they will eventually be shipped to historical societies or university archives, where they can be better preserved.

Although e-books make virtual communication readily available, the library will provide a place for collaborative learning and face-to-face, social interactions. Storytelling, puppetry, crafts, crayons, debates, and presentations will continue to enrich every child's library experience. And while the education of most students will feature highly individualized courses that meet their specific learning styles and goals, interpersonal and collaborative skills will also be an essential part of the curriculum.

As librarians, we'll have to compete with businesses and other institutions to attract customers. Since libraries are no longer the only information game in town, it will be our skills--especially our interpersonal skills--that will entice patrons. In other words, librarians themselves will be one of the prime reasons that people visit the library. If the library is not a wonderful place for learning, socializing, and relaxing, students and teachers will use their e-books in settings that are.

Resources. The school librarian, of course, will still select commercial digital materials for students and staff. While librarians may purchase some single-title resources, for the most part, they will acquire access to collections of digital materials, which will supplement state-provided resources; the Internet; and standard e-book resources, such as dictionaries, thesauri, and atlases. And, of course, librarians will acquire and track the licenses needed to use these products, and create budgets to purchase them.

Materials will need to be selected even more carefully to support the curriculum and specific instructional needs of teachers. With so much information available, maintaining a highly usable library Web page, tailored specifically to the needs of an individual school's curriculum, will be one of the librarian's primary jobs.

The librarian's expertise, available online and accessible through e-books, will still be the single most valuable resource the library has to offer. We'll need to possess not only the expertise to locate specific materials, resources, and information, but the know-how to use expert systems that rely on artificial intelligence to answer our patrons' tough questions.

Jobs. Teachers and administrators must come to us for help with problems that only we can solve. On the other hand, classroom teachers will continue to send kids to the library only if the librarian is better at helping students find information or complete a task than the teacher himself. As printed textbooks become obsolete, librarians will use their experiences and skills (gained while designing Web pages and Webquests) to assist teachers in creating highly individualized electronic textbooks that are read on e-books. We will still need to be experts in children's and young adult materials--regardless of their format--that meet the needs of both struggling and advanced learners. And we'll need to continue to provide teachers with staff-development programs on the latest information technologies and resources.

With the growing glut of information, it's no surprise that information-literacy skills will become more important to students' future success. As a result, librarians will need to focus more on helping students define their information-related problems and questions; search ever-larger amounts of available information; carefully determine the reliability of sources; interpret, organize, and analyze information; construct powerful ways to communicate their findings; evaluate and reflect on the effectiveness of their products and the efficiency of the process; and make safe, ethical decisions while online.

In the end, administrators and parents will view librarians as indispensable because of our knowledge of individual children and their special needs, and the personal relationships we form with them. In Neal Stephenson's novel The Diamond Age (Bantam, 1995), a youthful heroine is guided through a rough childhood by an e-booklike device called A Young Lady's Illustrated Primer. This wonderful tool is a self-paced, library tutorial that skillfully offers just the right amount of information and advice. Although the girl doesn't realize it, the primer's lessons are powerful and useful because they've been created by a caring human mentor--a guardian angel. In the future, the best schools will be the ones that provide the best teachers; the poorer schools will rely increasingly on economical technologies.

Librarians need to lead the fight for intellectual freedom in their schools--battling against the censorship of digital resources, advocating for patrons' rights to privacy, and helping to enforce copyright laws. We also need to have the expertise to advise students on the proper use of all information technologies. And we need to continue to be not just the brains of our schools, but their souls as well.

In my darkest dystopian fantasies, technology directors select not just library materials, but programs for an entire library. If enterprises like "Libraries R Us" are one day able to provide library resources and services virtually and cheaply, what will prevent schools from outsourcing our jobs? It's a question that those of us who want to continue working in education need to answer soon.

There isn't a guaranteed place for librarians in tomorrow's schools. As the needs of our patrons and schools change, as technologies evolve and the definition of education is transformed, our profession needs to create a new role for itself. But we've done it before, and we can do it again--if we look upon the challenge as an opportunity, and seize it with excitement and optimism.


Author Information
Doug Johnson is director of media and technology for the Mankato Area Public Schools in Minnesota.

 

The E-Book of 2015

The digital book in its mature form will have many advantages over that of the now defunct Sony Bookman, cumbersome, expensive laptop, or handheld device with its tiny screen.1 It will be a new kind of book with which one can cuddle up in bed, take to the beach, or carry on a bicycle. From reports of developing technologies, one may safely conclude a true e-book:

  • Will be highly portable, durable, and customizable. Mine will be a slim padded 6" x 9" notebook bound in calfskin weighing ounces, not pounds.2 It will run on a watch battery that needs replacing once every three years, supplemented by a solar panel.3 It will have high-speed wireless connections to the Internet and peripheral devices, such as projectors, printers and earphones.4 All its memory is static and the screen is made of strong, semi-flexible plastic.5 A bump or drop may scuff, but not break the device. Special models for students needing adaptive technologies will be available.
  • Will offer a screen with higher resolution than the printed page. Open my e-book and the left hand side will show a softly glowing, backlit, glare free screen that can switch from landscape to portrait layout.6 My wife can sleep while I read in bed. My page's background would be a rich ivory color with the resolution of paper and be flicker-free. The text's font can be changed to suit one's personal taste and the size adjusted for aging eyes. A tap will bring up a dictionary definition and pronunciation for any word, and in many cases, an illustration. Automatic translation of texts in languages other than English is instantaneous.7 The other side of the notebook will hold input and output devices of my choice - keyboard, track pad, stylus, speaker, microphone, and camera.
  • Will be fully multimedia. The page displays full color graphics, digital video and offers text to speech in a natural voice. (I'll download James Earl Jones and Kathleen Turner to be my narrators.) Audio books with full dramatization and magazine and newspaper articles can be downloaded and listened to, as well as motion pictures, radio programs, and television programs.8
  • Will allow annotation, searching, and bookmarking of e-texts. One can doodle in the margins with a stylus on the touch sensitive screen or via the keyboard on electronic sticky notes. The user can search the full text and notes and set referenced bookmarks.
  • Will have both internal and online storage space. Dozens of books plus all standard reference sources will be instantly accessible from the terabyte storage chip within the device. Lesser-used items will be accessible from online personal libraries, through worldwide public or private lending sources, or through online bookstores. E-texts and downloadable audio books will be less expensive than their physical cousins, reflecting cost saving realized by not having to print, transport, store, or remainder any item. One of my books happens to be a great Dorothy Dunnett novel, unavailable in paper for 10 years. E-books mean never having to say out of print.
  • Will change the nature of "fiction." Many writers may experiment with text that is customizable by the end user for both artistic and commercial purposes. The reader may substitute the name of his or her current inamorata or inamorato for the protagonist (or murder victim). The latest Stephen King can be set to mild, scary or terrifying, or Harold Robbins to suggestive, lurid, or ... well, let's not go there. Video games and fiction may merge and the skills and choices of the reader/player may determine the outcome of the plot.9
  • Maybe integrated into a more fully functional "e-backpack." This device will be a means of storing notes, papers, and teacher-generated study materials and customized e-textbooks; an e-portfolio documenting the exploration of a series of related topics, each assignment building on the last; an e-organizer with appointment calendar, to-do-list, and address book; an e-wallet that serves as a library card, lunch ticket, petty cash, and sports pass protected with biometric security; and an e-communicator capable of transmitting both voice and data, including digital video. The e-backpack will include interactive learning programs prescribed as part of every learner's IEP and include basic productivity software such as a word processor, spreadsheet, web editor, database, video editor, and graphics tools.
  • Will be affordable.10 The price of e-book hardware is a non-issue. The devices themselves will be no more expensive than school supplies in the past. Software distributors and e-text publishers practically give them away with subscription services. The funds schools once spent on textbooks and printing costs heavily subsidize the costs of this equipment for children whose families cannot afford it.
  • Will contain a monitoring chip. With the passage of the Patriot Act of 2009, all electronic communication devices used in schools will have a Mind Police chip that automatically sends logs to the school's office of testing and assessment, the vice-principal's office, and the Department of Homeland Security for data-mining. Of course, all students have discovered how to disable the chips.11

 

Sources:

  1. In his book, In the Age of the Spiritual Machine, author Ray Kurzweil makes a compelling argument that Moore's Law - that computing power will double every 18 months - will not only continue but accelerate exponentially well into the foreseeable future. Nearly all the functionality of my desired e-book is now commercially available, but at a high price.
  2. Fully functional notebook computers can now be found that weigh less than 3 pounds.
  3. Calculators have used this technology for some years.
  4. Both Wi-Fi (802.11) and Bluetooth are rapidly becoming standard on most portable computing devices.
  5. Brainium's W-Book uses only static memory. Floppy disks are rapidly being replaced by thumb drives as a means of transporting computer files physically. One company developing a "digital paper" is PARC Research.
  6. Many tablet computers already have this feature.
  7. Google now translates webpages into over 100 languages, including Elmer Fudd.
  8. Download best sellers into your iPod today at audible.com.
  9. Today's most highly rated video games are plot-driven. Metal Gear Solid: the Twin Snakes is an example, according to my gamer son.
  10. Think graphic calculator prices and cell phones give-a-ways.
  11. Computer use logs and e-mail monitoring systems, such as Symantec's Mail-Gear are common in schools.
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