A Library 2.0 State of Mind

Image: Rodin’s The Thinker in Paris, from Flickr
This week, with the blog’s launch, I ‘ve had lots of conversations with folks about the term “Library 2.0,” and lots of opportunities to overlay those conversations with what I’m observing in my own school library.
As a friend posed to me, “So, is Library 2.0 just about Web 2.0 tools being in a library?” And it’s had me thinking about just how broad and powerful Library 2.0 could be if we thought about the themes and values of Web 2.0 that we can incorporate.
As we’ll discuss in this blog throughout the year, as we reflect on the articles in the magazine, Web 2.0 tools tend to have some common themes and concepts:
- Working together (to develop open-source software, to build collective knowledge such as in the Wikipedia, to make conference calls using Skype, to share tags and favorite Webspaces via Delicious or Furl)
- Finding and sharing one’s voice (via blogging, videocasting, YouTube, or podcasting to an authentic audience)
- Responding to the work of others (via blog comments or “talkback” audio recording features or working on one’s own blog)
- Finding a community (via social networking like Facebook, Myspace, or LibraryThing, or via interactive environments like SecondLife)
- Expressing oneself in a variety of modalities (audio podcasts, videos, writing)
- Learning by interacting with content and with peers (all of the above!)
There are probably more that will evolve as our conversation continues, but those are a starting point. Now let’s strip away the technology for a moment and look just at the activities that are bolded above. Are there tools beyond Web 2.0 that we can use to strengthen our school library’s importance in our students’ learning lives? Let’s try the list of important themes and concepts again, this time mapping to non-technology things we find in strong libraries:
- Working together (combining individual research into a group project, being part of a broadcast team, re-enacting a storytime tale through drama, contributing findings to a community “graffiti” bulletin board)
- Finding and sharing one’s voice (via meaningful instructional projects that call on students to wrangle with authentic, real-world issues and share their findings with others — think about student research on global warming, invasive species, etc., a writing center where young writers can explore storymaking and storytelling)
- Responding to the work of others (conferencing with peers)
- Finding a community (book clubs, hanging out in the library at lunchtime)
- Expressing oneself in a variety of modalities (synthesizing research in a variety of ways that go far beyond a PowerPoint with three bullets per page, such as written projects, drama, songwriting, original historical fiction, original stories and puppetry, etc.)
- Learning through interactivity with content and peers (What can I learn from you? What can I learn from this source?)
Here’s an idea …
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First, consider answering this question for yourself: “My ideal school library media center is a place where ___________.” Keep a list in your desk drawer and add to it as inspiration strikes.
Next, using a large piece of bulletin board paper or an online wiki, invite students to finish this sentence: “Our school library media center is a place where _______________.”
I did this in my elementary school library media center this week, and I realized that nobody wrote, “Our library is a place where we learn the Dewey Decimal System,” or, “Our library is a place where I learn what the capital of Venezuela is and how many people live there.”
Instead, here is part of what was recorded in a half-day flurry of activity:
- Our school library media center is a place where we learn about things.
- Our school library media center is a place to love.
- Our school library media center is a place where everybody are [sic] friends.
- I love the library.
- Our school library media center is a place where magic happens.
Now, it’s hard to know whether the kids who wrote this are Web 2.0 kids (like the Video Club kids who design their own video broadcast and film it, or the upper elementary kids are designing school Habits of Mind comic books with Comic Life software or the Podcasting Club kids) or if it’s the group of first grade girls who have fallen in love with our new writing center and now handwrite books about cats that we faithfully add to the OPAC or if it’s one of the girls who give away lunch recess so they can help second graders check out books.
But something special is happening this year … together, we’re building a place where Web. 2.0 values are integrated. We’re building a place where magic happens.
Join the Conversation
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- What does Library 2.0 mean to you?
- What are the technology activities that build on those values?
- What are the non-technology activities that build on those values?





April 8th, 2008 at 10:27 am
Thanks for this wonderful article. You are the best!
April 8th, 2008 at 10:35 am
Thanks, Nancy! For other readers, Nancy pioneered the use of a wiki to track Battle of the Books practice questions in our district.
September 24th, 2008 at 10:47 am
The Notepad planning for what a great library should be is a great place to start. Honestly, I love the “where magic happens” statement - How can that not be the main goal?
September 10th, 2009 at 8:56 am
Hi! I was surfing and found your blog post… nice! I love your blog.
Cheers! Sandra. R.