Comments on: Information Cartography http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/12/18/information-cartography/ The Humanities and Technology Camp Wed, 23 May 2012 10:37:45 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.12 By: How do we share our knowledge of historic places? | THATcamp Columbus http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/12/18/information-cartography/#comment-66 Thu, 14 Jan 2010 20:27:10 +0000 http://thatcamp.clevelandhistory.org/?p=376#comment-66 […] those presented by Candace Nast, Marjorie McLellan, Andrea Odiorne, Justin Hons, Stephen Titchenal, Doug Lambert, and Phil Sager. For a quick bit of background, I currently work for Baltimore Heritage, a […]

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By: Doug Lambert http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/12/18/information-cartography/#comment-65 Wed, 13 Jan 2010 22:06:06 +0000 http://thatcamp.clevelandhistory.org/?p=376#comment-65 ve observed my own literacy is limited not particularly by any tools I was educated in or not, but by what I’ve had time to get into to meet a particular curiosity or need. I have a general sense that I could do anything, programming and application-wise, if I had the gumption and time. In training others on a particular piece of software we use for indexing oral histories, we have observed that technical/computer skill sets of, say, a room full of high school teachers varies significantly. But that variability does not depend on age--though there is generally a correlation--and hence our strategy for teaching them has to be adaptable. I’ve observed that the variability falls on a continuum that I generally characterize as computer/tech fearlessness. On one end of the scale you have the fearless, to whom you can explain the broadest concepts and goals and turn them loose to bang their head against the software (i.e., little need for examples and details). On the other end, you have the more fearful, for whom step by step examples and instructions are imperative. The challenge is that the extremities often have to be instructed during the same short period of time. So I’m thinking the answer to the question “How can you teach advanced and basic literacy to a group simultaneously?” lies somewhere in the question “How do you teach/promote technology fearlessness?” Of course, we have to characterize it better first probably...]]> On Digital Literacy and Fearlessness…

Equating digital literacy with fearlessness comes from some first hand experience with software training and observing my own interaction with computers/software over the years. From my personal end, I’ve observed my own literacy is limited not particularly by any tools I was educated in or not, but by what I’ve had time to get into to meet a particular curiosity or need. I have a general sense that I could do anything, programming and application-wise, if I had the gumption and time.

In training others on a particular piece of software we use for indexing oral histories, we have observed that technical/computer skill sets of, say, a room full of high school teachers varies significantly. But that variability does not depend on age–though there is generally a correlation–and hence our strategy for teaching them has to be adaptable. I’ve observed that the variability falls on a continuum that I generally characterize as computer/tech fearlessness. On one end of the scale you have the fearless, to whom you can explain the broadest concepts and goals and turn them loose to bang their head against the software (i.e., little need for examples and details). On the other end, you have the more fearful, for whom step by step examples and instructions are imperative. The challenge is that the extremities often have to be instructed during the same short period of time. So I’m thinking the answer to the question “How can you teach advanced and basic literacy to a group simultaneously?” lies somewhere in the question “How do you teach/promote technology fearlessness?” Of course, we have to characterize it better first probably…

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By: Information Cartography at Work Work | THATcamp Columbus http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/12/18/information-cartography/#comment-64 Wed, 13 Jan 2010 20:37:21 +0000 http://thatcamp.clevelandhistory.org/?p=376#comment-64 […] history, oral history, or really any history I followed my curiosity into a realm I often call “Information Cartography”. I now work full time as Director of Technology at Randforce. What we do here is an evolving […]

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By: Marjorie McLellan http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/12/18/information-cartography/#comment-63 Tue, 12 Jan 2010 01:28:25 +0000 http://thatcamp.clevelandhistory.org/?p=376#comment-63 These seems a bit like the Getting Things Done type maps that include Urgent and Important, Urgent but not Important, Important but not Urgent, and Not Important and Not Urgent? The visualization of our work/play/lives in different forms seems to yield up new relationships among the data. I’m curious about approaches to visualizing or mapping and analyzing data that I work with such as life stories.

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By: Faith Van Horne http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/12/18/information-cartography/#comment-62 Wed, 23 Dec 2009 22:59:20 +0000 http://thatcamp.clevelandhistory.org/?p=376#comment-62 I’m interested to know why and how you equate digital literacy with fearlessness.

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By: brooke http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/12/18/information-cartography/#comment-61 Sat, 19 Dec 2009 01:11:00 +0000 http://thatcamp.clevelandhistory.org/?p=376#comment-61 Not a bad work-work schema!

I surely like the idea of “Oral history as a Cultural, Technical, and Organizational Node in the Digital Age.”

Elaborate a bit, many layers there.

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