THE WEARINESS OF THE FLESH:
REFLECTIONS ON THE LIFE OF THE MIND IN AN ERA OF ABUNDANCE
Paul B. Gandel
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Vice Provost for Info Svcs & Dean, University Libraries, University of Rhode Island
Email: gandel@uri.edu
Richard N. Katz
Vice President, EDUCAUSE
Email: rkatz@educause.edu
ABSTRACT
The invention of the printing press reduced higher education’s
learning-resource scarcity. Access to learning increased, and this democratization
of education indirectly contributed to the idea of political democracy
in the western world. As part of these political changes, equilibrium
was sought between the supply of expertise needed to promote prosperity
and the demand for such expertise. This equilibrium has been elusive
as the world economy shifts to a reliance on intellectual capital. To
complicate matters, we now live in a world of staggering information
abundance. How do we mange such boundless information? One answer may
lie in viewing the social character of information (how information is
used) as fundamental in setting information management agendas. This
article presents a holistic approach to information management as one
strategy to create effective management of information that starts with
the individual and ends with collective knowledge and wisdom.
KEYWORDS Knowledge economy, information
abundance, information management, information ecology, personal digital
repositories
I. INTRODUCTION
Elsewhere in this volume, William Graves and Carol Twigg call our attention,
appropriately, to issues of scarcity. By focusing our attention on the “three
As” of accessibility, affordability, and accountability, these
authors correctly focus our attention on one of the great dilemmas of
the so-called knowledge-driven era. This dilemma, of course, is the disequilibrium
between the supply of knowledge workers and the increasing global demand
for their services. This imbalance focuses our attention on issues of
scarcity; and scarcity, in turn, forces our attention on educational
access and affordability (supply and availability), on efficiency, productivity,
(resource utilization), and accountability.
The urgency of the issues associated with access, affordability, and
accountability has blunted our attention on a fourth A: abundance—though
in fairness, abundance is really one subtext in a conversation about
educational supply. Abundance deserves elevation and discussion in this
issue because on some levels, the history of human learning can be described
in terms of scarcity, and because the realpolitik of the web and web-based
learning provides an important opportunity to rethink many of our core
assumptions about the nature of teaching and learning and about the purposes
of the college or university.
II. A HISTORY OF SCARCITY
Higher education’s history is a history of scarcity—scarcity
of learning resources such as educational facilities, libraries, and
laboratories and scarcity of experts: masters and professors. Prior to
the invention of moveable type, literacy and learning were placed in
the service of the secular or ecclesiastical ruling elites. Sacred and
secular texts were copied by hand and stored in imperial palaces or monastic
scriptoria for protection from both the elements and prying eyes. The
diffusion of knowledge in an era of scarcity was necessarily slow and
highly controlled. Access to learning and knowledge was mediated by privilege
and social standing, and literacy was both limited and rationed because
of the prevailing technologies (hand copying and illuminating manuscripts)
and as a means of enforcing social control.
The complexity of ruling and taxing nation-states necessitated the broadening
of educational access in secular matters, creating an environment conducive
to the construction of the great European universities at Bologna, Pisa,
Oxford, Cambridge, and Paris. Still, social control was not to be sacrificed
and access continued to be confined to the second and third sons of the
ruling elite.
Gutenberg’s invention of the printing press fostered literacy
(e.g., access), democratized learning, and thereby lessened the political
authority of church and state in Europe. Among other things, the impact
of this invention on the political economy of scarcity is credited with
the Protestant Reformation. The spread of literacy, through the increase
of experts and information resources, indirectly contributed as well
to the French Revolution, the American Revolution, and the spread of
the idea of political democracy in Western Europe and the New World.
The history of Western higher education since the French Revolution
has been dominated by at least seven epochal influences:
(1)
The Jeffersonian ideal that equated higher education with effective citizenship
and the viability of the democratic system of government;
(2) The U.S. Morill Act of 1862, creating grants of federal land to
U.S. states for the purpose of creating public universities that would
freely
admit students for the purpose of study in the agricultural and mechanical
(engineering) arts—variations on this act appear in Canada and
some European and Commonwealth countries;
(3) The creation of the first research university in Berlin (Humboldt
University) and the replication of this model in the U.S. (Johns Hopkins
University);
(4) The U.S. community college movement;
(5) The creation of the megaversity, exemplified by the Open University;
(6) The successful private-market capitalization, standardization, and
globalization of higher education exemplified the University of Phoenix;
and
(7) The partially successful integration of synchronous and asynchronous
online instructional techniques with the proliferation, controlled and
uncontrolled, of online resources.
All of these developments reflect inventions. Institutions were designed
to foster equilibrium between the supply of expertise needed to promote
social and economic prosperity and the demand for such expertise. Equilibrium,
of course, has proved to be elusive as the world economy shifts, growing
from its reliance on the traditional factors of production such as land,
labor, and financial capital to factors increasingly associated with
renewable components such as intellectual capital.
III. AN ERA OF INFORMATION ABUNDANCE
The proliferation of computers, networks, and networked information
creates a new dilemma. In this dilemma, access to information is, or
can be forecast to be, relatively easy, inexpensive, widespread, and
democratic. In essence, information and the tools needed to place information
in the service of education are accessible. Of course, even 3,000 years
ago, King Solomon reminded us that “of making many books, there
is no end; and much study is a weariness of the flesh [1].” The
dilemma of the first decades of the knowledge-driven era is that of a
new abundance and of a new and perhaps growing disequilibrium between
the raw materials of learning production (e.g., information resources)
and the other factors of learning production (tutors, professors, intelligent
learning environments, asynchronous learning programs, online mediation
techniques, and the like). Further, our current and prospective era of
information abundance will challenge many of our basic assumptions and
practices about safeguarding, protecting, filtering, preserving, evaluating,
purging, describing, cataloguing, and vetting information pursuant to
the purposes of teaching, learning, and scholarship.
So, while humans have long bemoaned searching for needles in haystacks,
why does this issue of information abundance deserve particular attention
here and now? There are four reasons.
First, the shift from an industrial to a knowledge economy recognized
by Daniel Bell as early as 1973 [2] has begun, is accelerating rapidly,
and is now accepted in principle by most. The economies of many postindustrial
nations are dominated by (1) information technology and telecommunications;
(2) financial services; (3) entertainment, publishing, news, and other
media; and (4) pharmaceutics and biotechnology. These industries do not
depend for their success on labor or land, but instead on intellectual
and financial capital. They are quintessentially knowledge industries
dependent on information technology, on having or restricting access
to the right information at the right time, and on managing information
flows.
Second, the economics of semiconductor and related manufacturing should
force us to reassess our thoughts about scarcity and abundance. Moore’s
Law, which posits the doubling of semiconductor performance at any constant
price over any 18-month period, has been validated in the commercial
market for more than 20 years. Further, a spate of related laws has been
coined to account for and anticipate the doubling of storage capacity,
bandwidth, and other elements of the IT infrastructure. In essence, a
basic desktop computer with significant local storage now costs no more
than the ubiquitous color TV. High-speed internet access is widely available
in most cities and in many university towns, at prices that compare with
premium cable television service. In short, access to the electronic
tools of modern learning probably now compare favorably with the cost
of textbooks and increasingly subsume the costs of some licensed resources
such as course materials, telephone, television, and others. These costs
will likely continue to decline dramatically in relation to performance.
Third, information integration is becoming the norm. If the first half
century’s history of computing in higher education was the history
of developing standalone and institutionally-based systems to support
higher education’s myriad administrative details such as paying
people, accounting for money and things, issuing parking fines, tracking
library books, fining, billing, registering people for class, and allocating
classrooms, the next half century is likely to be characterized by the
standardization of these applications; integration of these applications
with one another, and shift of attention, invention, and investment to
systems designed to foster learning productivity and outcomes.
Since 1997, U.S. colleges and universities alone have spent more than
$5 billion to modernize and standardize their core administrative information
systems. New techniques and standards such as XML and Web Services are
being investigated and deployed to further the moves toward standardization
and interoperability. Already, two-thirds of U.S. colleges and universities
have implemented one or more course management systems (CMS) to introduce
automation and standardize the delivery of instruction. New and improving
technologies and techniques for storing, mining, analyzing, and presenting
data and information are bringing together textual, aural, visual, and
other sources in new ways. Further, breakthroughs in animation, scientific
visualization, virtual reality, and simulation are making it possible
for people to interact with information in fundamentally new ways.
Fourth, one underlying principle of the knowledge-driven era is that
education is a lifelong endeavor and may—only occasionally—be
mediated by the traditional artifacts of our historical learning experiences:
places, professors, age-normed peer learners, degrees. The shift from
an age-specific learning expectation to a lifelong expectation is already
reshaping the marketplace for teaching and learning. New assessments
of educational outcomes, new markers of educational attainment, new suppliers,
and new methods of institutional accreditation are appearing and evolving
as we scramble to mediate supply and demand for knowledge and learning. IV.
A FUTURE OF NEARLY UNIMAGINABLE ABUNDANCE
In many ways, the markets for knowledge and learning are evolving like
those for food. From a planetary perspective, we have the capacity to
produce enough food to sustain human life in a reasonable fashion. The
problems of nutrition and world hunger relate more to issues related
to distribution, global politics and economics, education, and other
complex factors. With regard to information, knowledge, and learning,
the future is nearly unimaginable. As the costs of electronic storage
continue to plummet, the capacity will be created for everyone who so
chooses to capture, make visible, disseminate, and preserve every moment
of our lives. Our capacity to create a comprehensive digital record of
our work and life experiences will make earlier innovations such as desktop
publishing look like rounding errors.
The new potential will influence institutional and individual behaviors,
expectations, and experiences immensely. Before the invention of photography,
for example, only the rich could afford to document their existence through
commissioning a painting or sculpture. The invention of photography made
it possible for everyday people to document themselves in the course
of their everyday lives. Today, reality TV and webcams and now cell phones
record, store, and broadcast the minutiae of some people’s lives.
Weblogs reflect early attempts to organize our personal experiences for
the purpose of sharing those experiences with others. In the next decade,
the recording, storage, and broadcast of the minutiae of everyone’s
life will become technically and economically feasible. Seizing this
possibility will simply be a matter of choice.
While the educational benefits of such capability may be arguable, it
is less arguable that these capabilities will be available or that they
will be used. Wild underestimates of the capacity of people to find uses
for telephones or the PC at home or in offices are ascribed to the likes
of Microsoft’s Bill Gates and Digital’s Ken Olson, and now
make for humorous asides over drinks. The internet remained long the
domain of the techies until the web opened that medium up for popular
consumption.
The educational implications of staggering abundance—that is,
the near-infinite individual recording, storage, and transmission capabilities—should
in fact be argued in significant detail. For example, over 31 billion
pieces of email are now exchanged daily [3]. While it is unlikely that
we will accurately forecast, let alone manage, the impacts of massive
information abundance, it is axiomatic that these impacts will magnify
King Solomon’s complaint beyond comprehension. These implications
will be both institutional and pedagogical.
V. THE MANAGEMENT OF BOUNDLESS INFORMATION Economists
will quickly remind you that “almost free” isn’t free,
and anyone who has been responsible for managing an institution’s
stock of technology, software licenses, licenses for library content,
and so forth will quickly add that indeed while costs per MIPS, per message
transmitted, per gigabyte, or per lookup have all plummeted, the total
costs of maintaining this new environment have skyrocketed. Quietly,
higher education technology providers are engaged in discussion about
what IT services and what service levels to maintain. Some are withdrawing
from the decreasingly sustainable provision of telephone services for
students in college housing, while others ponder the potential of offering
electronic mail services to alumni, parents, and other stakeholders in
addition to current students, faculty, and staff. Cliff Lynch points
out that we now have the capacity to make all our courses “visible” as
more and more course material gets produce in digital form and is stored
on institutional computers [4]. MIT has taken the first very visible
step in this direction by making all its course material available to
the world through its Open Knowledge Initiative. The question then becomes
how much almost-free disk space should be allocated to members of the
community, for how long, and for what purposes?
Institutions are becoming more and more sophisticated users of the information
they possess, and they will need to get progressively better at data
modeling, warehousing, mining, and reporting. The potential nuclear meltdown
at Three Mile Island illustrates this point. Meltdown nearly occurred
not because of the lack of information but because technicians did not
attend to the right information. As Christopher Burns points out, “The
crisis at Three Mile Island dramatically illustrates how disaster can
result if information quantity is used as a substitute for information
quality [5].” Similarly, the tragic events of 9/11 also illustrate,
in part, the problem of too much information. Almost everyone associated
with the investigation of possible intelligence failures agrees that
the failure to prevent the attacks stemmed not from the lack of intelligence
information, but rather from the failure to recognize this information
and to act on it in a coordinated fashion.
The clash of cultures within the data management professions further
exacerbates the development of effective institutional information management
strategies. Technologists view the problem from the perspective of creating
greater capacities for digital storage or creating better search engines.
Librarians are often focused primarily on the acquisition of information
external to the institution. Moreover, the systems they have created
are built on preservation and scarcity, not abundance. Archivists and
records managers, on the other hand, are geared to making policy decisions
about what’s important. However, the scope of their responsibility
never expanded beyond official and typically paper documents. Furthermore,
they are too often focused on the evidential qualities of records rather
than the informational content of records that can be used for decisions
and actions [6].
The personal counterpart to the institutional data management dilemma
described at Three Mile Island is described richly by R. L. Ackoff in
his article Management Misinformation Systems. Ackoff found that students
who were given only abstracts of journal articles performed better on
exams than students who were assigned the reading of the entire article.
Ackoff concludes, “I do not deny that most managers (people) lack
a good deal of information that they should have, but I do deny that
this is the most important information deficiency from which they suffer.
It seems to me that they suffer from an overabundance of irrelevant
information [7].”
VI. CREATING BOUNDARIES: THE ECOLOGY OF MANAGING INFORMATION
In essence, what is being implied above is that information, knowledge,
and wisdom are more than just the collection of bits within large data
stores. Rather, it is the social character of information, that is, how
information is used, that should become primary in setting our information
management agendas. While the raw information of scholarship and learning
is being collected at an astounding rate, it is also being lost or made
unusable at an even more astounding rate. Therefore, we need to take
a much more holistic approach that recognizes the interconnection of
information resources and the individuals who create and use this information.
A metaphor that has been used to describe this holistic approach is to
view information systems as a form of ecosystem—an information
ecology.
Nardi and O’Day define information ecology as a system of “people,
practices, values, and technology in a particular local environment [8,
p49].” For Davenport, information ecology puts “how people
create, distribute, understand, and use information at its center [9,
p5].” Both definitions focus on human activities and not technology
as the core of an information system. The key is capturing not simply
the data and information, but the contextual relationships and meanings
people give to that information. These ideas, of course, can be traced
to Vanevar Bush and his famous conceptualization of Memex. In 1945, Bush
argued,
Our ineptitude in getting at the record is largely caused by the artificiality
of systems of indexing. When data of any sort are placed in storage,
they are filed alphabetically or numerically, and information is found
(when it is) by tracing it down from subclass to subclass. It can be
in only one place, unless duplicates are used; one has to have rules
as to which path will locate it, and the rules are cumbersome. Having
found one item, moreover, one has to emerge from the system and re-enter
on a new path. The human mind does not work that way. It operates by
association. With one item in its grasp, it snaps instantly to the next
that is suggested by the association of thoughts, in accordance with
some intricate web of trails carried by the cells of the brain [10].
The idea behind information ecology is that the basic
elements are flows and nodes (think of flows as conduits and nodes as
information stores) that are intertwined in the sense that one builds
on the other. The dynamics of flows and nodes are not random, but are
determined by the interaction of four dimensions: interdependency, change,
timeboundness, and differentiation. More simply, an information ecology
is defined as a system of people, practices, values, and technologies
in a particular environment. The word ecology is important here, because
it conveys the sense of urgency about the need to control our information
ecologies “to inject our own values and needs into them so that
we are not overwhelmed by some of our technological tools [8,
p56].”
As Bush argues, too often in developing information systems, we expect
information to fit into some preordained system such as the way we fit
books into the Dewey Decimal System. Taking a more ecological approach
to information systems calls for focusing instead on the way information
is created and used—in many respects an approach not unlike the
one used by traditional archivists, that is, traditional archival approaches
that follow the principles of provenance and original order in building
stores of information and data. Provenance is more about keeping intact
the original intent, organizational order, and associational thinking
of the creator reflecting the context in which the information was used—in
other words, focusing on the individual creator and user of the information.
Just as the study of ecological systems focuses first on the individual
organisms, perhaps too the design of our information systems should first
center on how individuals create and use information.
A. Focusing on the Individual
If we began with the premise that our information systems should be
designed based on the individual, how would such a system work? First
and foremost it would have to address individual information needs. For
example, institutions that are beginning to create institutional digital
depositories are finding it difficult to get professors to contribute
documents and other materials to these depositories. Part of the problem
may be the rigid organizational schemes designed to meet broadly based
needs. The problem may also be that these systems were not designed specifically
with the management of individual information needs in mind. It may in
fact be unreasonable to expect a professor or university administrator
to create specialized metatags to meet the requirements of institutional
digital repository, especially if that activity is separate from the
scholarly or work activity. On the other hand, what if we provided individuals
the tools to easily create and share personal digital depositories designed
to meet the productivity needs of the scholar, administrator, or student—systems
designed to organize and facilitate their own research, work, or learning
agenda?
These questions almost inevitably lead to an exploration of e-portfolios.
If an e-portfolio is not simply a collection of material, but a collection
of material with a purpose, it fulfills the best purposes associated
with personal archives. That is, such collections mindfully built according
to conscious choices about what to retain and what to discard form a
knowledge base about an individual, what we will refer to as a personal
digital repository. It is a repository that collects and synthesizes
data and information the way an individual needs and uses that information.
While the terms e-portfolio or content management system could be used
to describe such a personal information system because it shares much
with them from a technological perspective, we find personal digital
repository a much more appropriate term because it reflects the specific
purpose of such a system. Such repositories begin to fulfill Bush’s
prophesy of Memex: “a device in which an individual stores all
his books, records, and communications, and which is mechanized so that
it may be consulted with exceeding speed and flexibility. It is an enlarged
intimate supplement to his memory [10].”
Personal digital repositories offer intriguing possibilities to bring
together individual collected wisdom and knowledge built over time that
can be shared with others. Imagine if researchers could not only shift
through Einstein’s own writings but also the writings of others
that he collected over time and used as a basis for building his own
ideas. Furthermore, imagine that researchers would also be able to trace
the contextual relationships and references Einstein created among all
this material. In some sense, it would be like looking over the shoulder
of a great thinker and tracing the evolution of his thought process over
time by exploring his personal knowledge store.
On the other hand, for years, CIOs have worked diligently to eliminate
shadow systems so that all information might be kept in centralized and
standardized repositories. Encouraging the development of personal digital
depositories would require a change in our strategic focus. It also begs
the question, What’s to keep this from becoming the dreaded proliferation
of disparate shadow information systems that CIOs have long worked to
prevent? Therefore, what role if any does the community play in the articulation
and enforcement of standards as regards such repositories or archives,
what costs does this institution incur to support them, and what rights
of access or ownership do institutions receive or grant vis-à-vis
these portfolios? These broad policy questions don’t even skim
the surface of the myriad other more practical issues such as standards
of authenticity for information in digital repositories, and so forth. B.
Creating Institutional Repositories from the Bottom Up While
the fear that personal digital depositories could become isolated silos
of information is certainly real, a very different scenario can be
envisioned. Recent developments such as weblogs and P2P technology
demonstrate it’s possible to build shared knowledge stores from
the bottom up. Using networked models based on jointly shared and controlled
resources, personal digital depositories could be viewed as the building
blocks for creating collective knowledge stores of affinity groups
and organizations. These self-governing groups could develop a set
of standardized practices and approaches to building collective repositories
from individual repositories over time. The tactics for collecting
these aggregated resources could focus on how organizations and groups
actually use these information resources. And, as in our scholarly
community and our work environment, peer review and peer pressure could
serve as the mechanisms for weeding the wheat from the chaff in these
collective repositories.
This organic approach of building organizational digital repositories
from the bottom up is very much in keeping with the ecological approach
advocated by Davenport for institutional information repositories.
In fact, Davenport sees it as the only viable organizational approach
to manage the growing glut of information. According to Davenport, “A
centralized highly engineered approach to this vast amount of information
is clearly untenable. Even the most carefully maintained records are
of no value unless they are used. Information management strategies
that make every employee a records manager seems to be the only viable
alternative [9, p20].”
To facilitate navigation through the network of personal and collective
digital repositories, metatools could be developed akin to web services.
That is, tools could be built that would allow information repositories
to advertise their availability in much the same way archivists develop
tools to describe their collections. These are repository guides, summarizing
the holdings, finding aids that detail the contents and an index that
complements the provenance or arrangement as an aid to identifying
relevant parts of the collections. Together, these tools would work
to provide a broad overall view of the material as well as pointers
to specific parts of the collection.
C. Implementing an Information Collective
Assuming that digital repositories could be built from the bottom
up as part of a collective process of individual records management
and knowledge creation, the questions then become: Where will all this
information reside? How would they be linked? A special form of data
storage would be needed. It would have to provide a permanent electronic
address for the collection of digital bits making up the repositories,
regardless of their physical location. In other words, it would serve
as an electronic archival bucket that would provide a permanent electronic
home for the repository. Permanent electronic locations would also
facilitate creating links between repositories. Within the bucket,
multiple formats and multiple internal organization schemes would have
to be supported.
Work on such systems for the permanent storage of digital archival
records is already under way. The D-Space system, from MIT, and Fedora
are two examples of such digital repositories. The Tufts V.U.E. project
demonstrates that it also possible to build tools and standards that
allow for sharing of information as well as the associated contextual
mapping of that information within the framework of a digital repository.
While these tools are primarily aimed at creating institutional repositories,
it may also be possible to use the same technical approach to create
a full network of individual as well as group repositories, thus creating
the nodes and flows necessary for a vibrant and effective ecological
system of shared information and individual knowledge and wisdom.
D. New Roles for the Information Professional
Clearly, in a world of network information systems consisting of individual
as well as collective digital repositories, the role of the information
and technology specialists will need to change. Technologists will
need to devise more transparent systems plans for convergence of systems
and a convergence of information types. Instructional designers will
need to support and educate the academic community about the benefits
of gathering and sharing digital assets and learning objects. The librarian
will have less of a role of organizing materials according to rigid
standards and more of a role in developing flexible organizing principles
for a variety of materials built on an underlying set of standard guidelines.
Their focus will be less about organizing the material after the fact
and more about teaching others how to organize their materials as they
produce them. Records managers’ roles will be in terms of the
types of materials addressed and the overall information policy of
the organization and needs of individuals within those organizations.
And CIOs will need to be more focused on being chief coordinator of
information organization across an organization, setting standards
and guidelines based on input and focusing on providing the tools that
will allow individuals to build and share personal depositories of
information.
VII. CONCLUSION: MEMEX REDUX
This idea of creating a shared system of interconnected individual
information systems capable of forming a network of shared knowledge
and wisdom is the culmination of a vision created over half a century
ago by Vannever Bush [10]. From the scholar’s workstation to
hypertext and the worldwide web, Bush’s vision has been a guiding
metaphor for technology developments in education. Personal digital
repositories linked together and easily shared would be the final step
in realizing Bush’s vision. For Bush, the answer to the information
explosion was memex, a scholar’s “mechanized private file
and library,” or in other words, a personal digital repository.
A scholar’s memex would in turn be linked to a network of scholars
so that one scholar could pass information to “his friend for
insertion in his own memex, there to be linked into the more general
trail.” Such a trail leads to effective management of information,
starting with the individual and ending with collective knowledge and
wisdom.
VIII. REFERENCES
- Bible: Hebrew Ecclesiastes (1.XII.13)
The Oxford Book of Verse in English Translation, Charles Tomlinson,
ed.. Oxford University Press, 1980.
- Bell, D. The Coming of Post-Industrial
Society: A Venture in Social Forecasting. New York: Basic Books, 1973.
- Lyman, P., and Varian, H. “How Much Information,” 2003.
Retrieved from http://www.sims.berkeley.edu/research/projects/how-much-info-2003/ on November 7, 2003.
- Lynch, C. “Life after Graduation: Beyond the Academy.” EDUCAUSE
Review 38(5): 12-13, September/October, 2003.
- Burns, C. “Three Mile Island: The Information Meltdown.” in
Horton, F.W. and D. Lewis, Great Information Disasters, 45–55.
London: ASLIB, 1991.
- Myburgh, S. “Strategic Information Management: Understanding
a New Reality.” The Information Management Journal 36(1): 36-43,
January/February 2002.
- Ackoff, R. L. “Management Misinformation Systems.” Management
Sciences 14(4): B147–B156, 1967.
- Nardi, B. and O’Day, V. L. Information
Ecologies: Using Technology with Heart. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1999.
- Davenport, T. H. Information Ecology. New York: Oxford University
Press, 1997.
- Bush, V. “As We May Think” Atlantic
Monthly 176(00001):
101-108, July 1945.
IX. ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Richard N. Katz is vice president of EDUCAUSE and Founding Director
of the EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research (ECAR). In nearly eight years
at EDUCAUSE, Katz has been responsible for publications, communications,
conferences and education, corporate relations, membership, R&D,
and information technology.
Before joining EDUCAUSE, Katz held a variety of management and executive
positions spanning 14 years at the University of California (UC). As
Executive Director of Business Planning and Practices, he was responsible
for the design and implementation of many of the nine-campus UC system's
strategic management initiatives. At UC, Katz was awarded the Gurevich
Prize, the Olsten Award, and was the 2nd recipient of that University's
Award for Innovative Management and Leadership.
Katz is the author, co-author or editor of six books and more than three
dozen articles and monographs on a variety of management and technology
topics. His book, Dancing with the Devil, was deemed one of the 10 most
important education-related books of 1999 by Lingua Franca. His recent
book, Web Portals in Higher Education, is being translated into Japanese
by Tokyo University Press. Katz received his B.A. from the University
of Pittsburgh, and his MBA from UCLA.
Paul B. Gandel is Vice Provost for Information Services and Dean of
University Libraries at the University of Rhode Island and is a professor
in the Graduate School of Library and Information Studies. As Chief Information
Officer (CIO), Gandel is responsible for all aspects of information technology
and information services—library services, computer services, voice
and data networking, instructional technology services, and institutional
research. His work at Rhode Island includes the development and management
of a $29 million initiative to upgrade the campus technology infrastructure.
As part of this initiative, Gandel has overseen the upgrade of Rhode
Island's entire communications network and the replacement of its administrative
computing systems.
Before coming to the University of Rhode Island, Gandel was Associate
Provost and Chief Information Officer at the Ohio University. Before
Ohio, Gandel was Senior Director of Academic Computing and Associate
Professor of Library Science at the University of North Texas, Supervisor
of the Computing Technology Group at Bell Laboratories, Head of Media
Services at the State University of New York at Plattsburgh, and Director
of the Research Library at the Visual Studies Workshop in Rochester,
New York. Gandel has made presentations and published on topics related
to the management of information systems, library administration and
services, software engineering, and visualization of information.
Dr. Gandel has a Ph.D. in Information Studies from Syracuse University,
an M.A. in Library Science from the University of Wisconsin, and an M.F.A.
in Photography and B.A. in History from the State University of New York
at Buffalo. |