Conférence de Berkeley sur les bibliothèques 2.0
Par Thomas le mercredi 19 décembre 2007, 13:36 - Bibliothèques - réflexions - Lien permanent
Le 02 novembre dernier se tenait à l'Université de Californie (Berkeley), une conférence sur le thème "Academic library 2.0". Elle était organisée par la Librarians Association of the University of California, Berkeley Division.
Les interventions de cette journée et les documents d'accompagnement sont disponibles en ligne. Je retranscris ci-après les intitulés des présentations :
- Terence K. Huwe, Director of Library and Information Resources, Institute
for Research on Labor and Employment, UC Berkeley:
"The Library Commons, Library 2.0 and the Research Community: Field Notes from the Institute for Research on Labor and Employment (IRLE)" - Raymond Yee, PhD, Lecturer, School of Information, UC Berkeley:
"What Should We Do With Our Digitized Books?" - Anne-Marie C. Basso, Harrison Dekker, Tim Dennis & Corinne
Robinson-Slouber, Doe Research & Collections, UC Berkeley:
“Collaborative Publishing – The Read/Write Web” - Erik Wilde, Visiting Professor, School of Information, UC Berkeley:
“Deconstructing Blogs” - Karen Munro, E-Learning Librarian & Jesse Silva, Federal Documents
Librarian, UC Berkeley:
"U. S. Congressional Research 2.0” - Michael Buckland, Professor, School of Information, UC Berkeley &
Kimberley Carl, Programmer Analyst:
“Self-Service Reference” - Teri Vogel, Information Specialist, UC San Diego:
"Pulling and Pushing Information Using RSS Feeds” - Danielle Kane, Chemistry/Biochemistry Librarian, UC Santa Cruz &
Bernadette Daly Swanson, UC Davis:
“Second Life: Education in a Virtual World” - James Neal, University Librarian & Vice President for Information
Services, Columbia University:
“The Case for Mutability: Library 2.0 and Implications for Academic Library Staffing, Organization, and Leadership”

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