Tuesday, October 21, 2008

2008 Georgia Conference on Information Literacy

Another conference has come and gone. The 2008 Georgia Conference on Information Literacy took place October 3-4, 2008, at the Coastal Georgia Center in Savannah. The weather couldn't have been more perfect, Oktoberfest celebrations were in full swing on River Street, and yet the conference sessions were packed, a testament to the high quality and timeliness of this year's presentations!

I wish I could have attended all of the sessions, but, of course, I'm one person and could only manage to be in one place at a time. Once again, I took some VERY rough notes, which I'll post here, but I hope if anyone has notes about the sessions I missed (or can add to what I've got here) they'll post them somewhere for us all to see. Luckily, too, a CD that collects some of the PowerPoint presentations in advance of the conference each year is also available. Visit the Conference Web site at http://ceps.georgiasouthern.edu/conted/infolit.html for more information (and to see the CFP for the 2009 Conference!).

So, here goes:

Panel 10

"Information Electracy: Developing a Category System for the Image" presented by Sean Morey, University of Florida. Morey presented alternatives to Aristotelian logic in an imagic age à la Greg Ulmer (whence the term "electracy," a term I distinctly dislike, by the way, even though, like many people in the field, I hold nothing but high regard for Ulmer and the important work he's done in the area). I thought it was really appropriate that Morey's presentation was actually a movie—yes, he sat there in person while we watched the movie (hmmm, wonder if I can get a copy of it? It was a really GOOD movie/presentation). Of course, he didn't address the intellectual property issues that might be involved in his use of several movie clips (real movies) included in his movie/presentation, so, hmmm, maybe I better not ask…. Ya never know!

Ionut Emil Iacob (Georgia Southern University) and Kevin Kiernan (University of Kentucky) then presented "IBX: Image Based XML for Digital Projects in the Humanities," which is a project they are working on that uses image-based XML (IBX), an image-based tagging system, to create a searchable database of images/artifacts (exigesis?). You can see more about this project at http://www.eppt.org. I hope we will be able to get them back next year to see how the project develops!

Marcia Ribble from the University of Cincinnati completed the session with her presentation of "Teaching Media Literacy: How Can It Fit into Teaching Composition?" Students, she says, are not just purveyors, but also creators, of images. The textbook for her class, Media Literacy by James Potter, approaches the topic from the standpoint of production. Historically, our field has looked at the reception of text rather than at its creation. Her class approaches production from the vantage of media (including text, of course, but also images and other media). [Our field has, of course, historically analyzed text (and images)—and taught our students to analyze literary artifacts—even while we have purported to teach production. That is, we teach our students to write, yes, but often what we are really teaching them isn't to write at all, but to analyze works of literature (in writing). Now we see a distinct shift in our field, as we teach students to analyze texts, images, and other media that they find in such spaces as FaceBook or MySpace instead of "great works." ]


 

Panel 12

"When Does Information Become Proprietary? The Link between Quotation and Attribution" presented by Carol Simspon, University of Texas, was a great way to round out the first morning of the conference. She presented some tried and true suggestions for helping students to avoid plagiarism. With her background in law, I found her written information for students particularly helpful since she was careful to define her terms and be explicit—very useful! I was a bit thrown off, however, when she said students might sometimes be guilty of unintentional plagiarism because they don't know how to make good "note cards." Do people REALLY still teach note cards?? Can you say "20th century!!"? I would also argue with her about the ethics and/or usefulness of using a plagiarism detection service, such as TurnItIn.com, but her presentation did make great use of examples and audience involvement in looking at some of the problems that these types of services may raise in even identifying plagiarized passages to begin with. All in all, a very good session.


 

More good stuff to follow. Watch this blog!