Book Lush 101: Drink Your Way through English Literature

Posted by Celia Walter | 30 Jun, 2009

[Below] is the first of a series of 13 "lectures" included in Professor Michelle Kerns, Book Examiner's fake college course, Book Lush 101: Drink Your Way through English Literature. For background on the series, the course syllabus, and a list of all upcoming lectures, visit the Book Lush 101 page here. 

Lecture 1: Uncorking the beginnings of English literature, or "Hand me another mead, Wiglaf, this epic poetry is killing me."

Beowulf, written sometime in the 700s by one or more unknown British authors, is considered to be the first major work of English literature. This epic poem relates the heroic adventures of the warrior Beowulf, takes place in Scandinavia, and is as boring as hell...

 

Mead, an alcoholic beverage made from the fermentation of honey and water with yeast, is considered by many scholars to be "the ancestor of all fermented drinks." Mead, which can range in alcoholic content from that of a mild ale to a strong wine, must have seemed like the nectar of the gods to 8th century inhabitants. No wonder why Grendel needed to be taken out -- messing with Danish warriors is bad, but messing with the mead hall? Your days are numbered, son...

Here is a homemade mead recipe courtesy of  Baron Sir Riekin ap Grugach...

The take-home lesson from Book Lush 101, Lecture 1? Beowulf, the foundational work of English literature, was firmly planted in the enjoyment of alcoholic beverages. 

Hold onto your hats, here comes lecture 2 -- The Canterbury Tales -- Alcohol and Literature, plus a third partner: Sex.

 

Thanks to Ingrid Thomson for this.

Internet use among the poor... From Research blogging

Posted by Celia Walter | 30 Jun, 2009

Robinson, L. (2009). A taste for the necessary. A Bourdieuian approach to digital inequality. Information, Communication & Society, 12 (4), 488-507

The “Diversity” issue of the journal Information, Communication and Society is out and it’s entirely devoted to the Communication and Information Technologies section of the American Sociological Association (CITASA). Laura Robinson’s remarkable article explores digital inequality among ........ Read more »

Robinson, L. (2009) A taste for the necessary. A Bourdieuian approach to digital inequality. Information, Communication , 12(4), 488-507. DOI: 10.1080/13691180902857678

Turn Your PowerPoint Presentation into a Video

Posted by Celia Walter | 29 Jun, 2009

How to Turn Your PowerPoint Presentation into a Video...

... a quick guide on how you can convert your PowerPoint presentation into a video...[more]

From: Search Engine Journal

The Idler, a magazine ... against the work ethic. Sample issue

Posted by Celia Walter | 29 Jun, 2009

The Idler is a bi-annual, book-shaped magazine that campaigns against the work ethic.

It was founded in 1993 by Tom Hodgkinson and his friend Gavin Pretor-Pinney. The title comes from a series of essays by Dr Johnson, published in 1758-9 in the Gentleman’s Magazine.

The intention of the magazine is to return dignity to the art of loafing, to make idling into something to aspire towards rather than reject. As well as providing a radical and thought-provoking read, The Idler is also very funny.

The trial issue of The Idler is a joint project with those marvellously polite revolutionaries, the men from QI, John Lloyd and John Mitchinson. It features sixteen fascinating facts from the QI databanks, a quite interesting conversation and QI presents idleness among the animals.

Other features include Warwick Cairns on why danger is safer, John Mitchinson celebrates the revolutionary life of William Morris and Paul Hamilton explores the wit and wisdom of Andy Warhol.

International Journal of Transdisciplinary Research

Posted by Celia Walter | 29 Jun, 2009
International journal of transdisciplinary research
The International Journal of Transdisciplinary Research is a peer reviewed academic journal that is concerned with extending and integrating the study of economics with disciplines within the natural and social sciences, as well as the humanities. As economics is intertwined in almost every field of research, it takes a transdisciplinary approach. It covers issues such as: sustainability, social multicriteria evaluations, ecological economics and the biophysical foundations of economics, systems research, and complexity and post normal science. It also includes articles from fields other than economics on how economic systems really work. Articles are freely available as PDF downloads with an archive of past issues.From Intute.ac.uk
http://www.ijtr.org/

KeePass Password Safe 1.16

Posted by Celia Walter | 13 Jun, 2009
Password security these days is of the utmost importance, and users who wish to remain diligent about such matters will appreciate learning about KeePass. This utility stores users' passwords in one encrypted database, and visitors can also use their built-in password generator. This version is compatible with computers running Windows 98 and newer. [KMG] From Scout Report

http://www.dominik-reichl.de/opensource.shtml#keepass

Open Access Scholarly Information Sourcebook (OASIS)

Posted by Celia Walter | 13 Jun, 2009

"The Open Access Scholarly Information Sourcebook (OASIS) aims to provide an authoritative 'sourcebook' on Open Access, covering the concept, principles, advantages, approaches and means to achieving it. The site highlights developments and initiatives from around the world, with links to diverse additional resources and case studies. As such, it is a community-building as much as a resource-building exercise. Users are encouraged to share and download the resources provided, and to modify and customize them for local use"

From Peter Scott's Library blog

I want to... How to do the things... From Phil Bradley

Posted by Celia Walter | 13 Jun, 2009

Comparisons of search engines' results

Posted by Celia Walter | 13 Jun, 2009

There are a few resources that have popped up in the last few days that allow you to compare searches from the major engines in a blind taste testing exercise. The first one that I came across was Blind Search. Run a search and get a three column set of results - simply choose the one set of results that you're happiest with. You'll then see the engines popped up afterwards; Bing, Google or Yahoo. You have to keep a note of the engine that you like the best, since a tally option that the site originally had has now been removed.

The second engine, which just displays two screens from Bing and Google is called Bingandgoogle which doesn't score much for originality, but is very accurate. Bingle does exactly the same job and you cannot really tell the two apart; the only difference being that you can switch results entirely to one search engine or the other.

Of course, if you don't like any of these you can always try Tripleme which does a search across Yahoo, Google and MSN Live (which I'm guessing is pulling results from Bing).

GrabAll allows you to compare two pane results for Google, Yahoo, Ask, Bing, DMOZ, AltaVista, Gigablast and Looksmart.

Scour lets you check out results from Google, Yahoo and Bing with a nice sort option.

Searchboth will compare results from Google, Yahoo, Ask, Dogpile, MetaCrawler, AltaVista, Looksmart and Websearch again in a two pane window approach.

Soovle takes a different approach by providing on page access to Google, Wikipedia, Amazon, Answers, Yahoo, Bing and YouTube, Type in your keyword and Soovle comes up with alternative terms - click on any of them and your search will be run on the appropriate engine.

From Phil Bradley's weblog

Students' "Hunt-fetch-and-finish drill": that's library research

Posted by Celia Walter | 12 Jun, 2009

When professors assign a library project to undergraduates, just what do they expect students to learn from the research part of the experience? What do professors think students are doing to come up with the sources in their papers? If there is a discrepancy between pedagogical intent and actual student research behavior, how do faculty members address it? Or do they care, especially since they may not spot a student’s research problem until the end of a course and may well not see that student again? Does the end of a well-written, well-supported argument justify whatever means a student uses to acquire sources?

These are issues I often fret about, both in private and aloud when I compare notes with other academic librarians. My concern arises not from a general suspicion that students are engaging in what I call WIGWAM research (Wikipedia – Internet – Google – Without Anything More), but from what students themselves have been telling me for decades. It is clear from e-mail, reference encounters, research consultations in my office, and questions that arise in library instruction sessions, that most students simply do not retain the concepts and logic involved in discovering information sources — never mind the principles for evaluating the sources they do turn up. Even students whom I’ve counseled extensively in the past, and whose projects turned out well, seem clueless the very next semester when they face a research assignment in a different course.

Here are the most persistent and troubling confessions I’ve heard from students over the years, with my speculation on their cause and cure. Some of these statements have been blurted out, others are responses to a question I’ve asked.

1. "I have no idea [about the dates or details of my topic]."

...

2. I’m wondering why I can’t I find this periodical article in the library’s catalog.

...

3. This magazine isn’t digitized, so I guess we don’t have it and I can’t get it.

...

4. I need to change my topic because there’s not enough stuff [sic] about it.

...

5. I’m not clear about what makes an article scholarly or a book a monograph.

...

6. I can’t find books about [an event that occurred last month].

...

7. I’m confused about the difference between a primary and a secondary source.

...

8. I’m afraid I’ll be cheating if I take references from someone else’s bibliography.

...

Interestingly, these revelations have not changed significantly in the past few decades, except that students now have how-to questions about technology as well. What worries me most today is the absence of undergraduate concern about evaluating sources as their research proceeds: They almost always want to gather sources first and then assess them, going back to the well for more if, and only if, their professor says they need additional support for one of their points. In other words, they do not see library research as a dynamic, iterative process, but as a hunt-fetch-and-finish drill. Further, students arrive in college believing that if a source exists and seems relevant, then it must be good and sufficient for their project.

Their savvy about what’s possible in a “free” Web world is at odds with their understanding — which is almost nil — of how knowledge of various sorts is created, packaged, transmitted, delivered, and paid for. These are serious misunderstandings with profound consequences, but if faculty and librarians share their perceptions and find ways to coordinate their messages, then student admissions of the future should, at the least, be different.

Mary W. George is senior reference librarian at Princeton University Library. She is author of the new book The Elements of Library Research: What Every Student Needs to Know(Princeton University Press).

From : Inside Higher Ed. Admissions of Another Sort

 

Facebook Users -- and Research -- Need Further Study

Posted by Celia Walter | 12 Jun, 2009

Good News: The Social-Networking Site Likely Doesn't Cause Poor Grades.

Bad News: Students Achieve Them on Their Own

College students who have defriended Facebook after news broke of a link between the social-network site and lower grades, or younger users whose parents have made them, can rest easy. The grade numbers arise from a study that is preliminary -- so much so that it cries out for further study even more than many other pilot experiments.

Facebook may well distract and delay but there is far from enough numerical evidence to support that claim, notwithstanding hundreds of international headlines to the contrary.

These latest headlines originated with a survey last year of 219 Ohio State University undergraduates and graduate students. The results were presented at the American Educational Research Association meeting in San Diego last Thursday.

Those students who said they used Facebook also said they had lower grades than those who don't use the social-networking site for such activities as updating their status and tracking friends. The Facebook users' achievements were lighter by about 0.5 grade-point-average points and 10 hours of weekly study, respectively.

...

The study triggered frightening headlines such as, "Study finds Facebook goofing hurts grades," "Study says Facebook can impact studies" and "Research finds the website is damaging students' academic performance."

However, researchers Aryn Karpinski, a doctoral student in education at Ohio State, and Adam Duberstein, an academic adviser at Ohio Dominican University, didn't examine the influence of Facebook on grades. Facebook may be a symptom of a big procrastination habit, not a cause. Should Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg pull the plug, chronic users of his site may just procrastinate elsewhere...[More]

From The Wall Street Journal.

Literature in Latin America

Posted by Celia Walter | 12 Jun, 2009
Literature in Latin America (LANIC)
Literature in Latin America, a subsection of the popular and indepth Latin American Network Information Center (LANIC) deserves highlighting for its extensive list of resources concerning every aspect of literature in South America. Available in English, Spanish and Portuguese, LANIC provides a list of links to specific literature websites arranged by country; newsgroups; mailing lists; journals; literature awards and regional resources. Websites include author homepages; literary journals and digital texts as well as poetry; drama; theatre and fiction resources. This accessible site is checked regularly; it should be one of the first places to check for Latin American links in general as well as literature more specifically. From Intute.ac.uk
http://lanic.utexas.edu/la/region/literature/

Does higher education produce the knowledge...and people needed for SA's development?

Posted by Celia Walter | 11 Jun, 2009

Isandla Institute and the Open Society

Foundation for South Africa invite you

to a Development Dialogue on

 

 Does higher education

produce the knowledge,

skills, competencies and

people needed for South

Africa’s development?

 

 Thursday 18 June 2009, 16h35 - 18h00 

 (tea and coffee served beforehand, please be seated at 16h35)    


Venue: The Studio, Centre for the Book

62 Queen Victoria Street, Cape Town
 

 

The recent ministerial report on transformation in higher education has highlighted serious transformation challenges, particularly as far as racism, sexism and diversity management are concerned. This raises important questions about the quality of life and of education experienced by students and how they are socialised in this context. Another pertinent issue the Development Dialogue will explore relates to the role of higher education in responding to labour market needs. Put differently, is the higher education system sufficiently aligned to the skills and expertise needed for South Africa’s economy and are graduates adequately prepared for future professional contexts?

 

Invited speakers: Dr Max Price (Vice Chancellor, University of Cape Town) and Prof Mary Metcalfe (Head of the Wits School of Education).

 

The Development Dialogue will be held on Thursday 18 June 2009 from 16h35-18h00. Tea and coffee are made available between 16h00-16h35. Kindly note that the event will start at 16h35. Afterwards, there will be an opportunity for informal interaction over drinks and snacks. 


If you are interested in attending this event, please r.s.v.p. on admin@isandla.org.za. You will receive confirmation of your attendance.

 
We look forward to seeing you there!

 

Plagiarism by researchers, what can be done?

Posted by Celia Walter | 11 Jun, 2009

Plagiarism… what can be done? Simply suffer it?

Prof. Artal, I am a post-doc in the UK. Although I am working now in vision research, I actually did my PhD in a different area and in a different country. I still try to be aware of the new papers appearing in my former research area and of course I like to see how my papers are used, and from time to time cited. Last week, I was having a look of a new paper in a journal (not quite prestigious, but with reasonable reputation in the field) and… I was initially surprised and later devastated to see that in that article several full paragraphs looked too familiar to me… in fact, those paragraphs were identical to those in one of my own papers. The experiments and results… again nearly identical and my paper not even cited. Is anything I can do? Brenda, Birmingham, UK.

Brenda, this is a radical example of plagiarism! I am sure most readers know the definition:

Plagiarism: "direct use or close imitation of the language and thoughts of another author and the representation of them as one's own original work”

Obviously, the journal that published that paper made a significant mistake, but it is true that often it can be difficult to detect these papers. At least, you should write the editor of both journals informing on the situation. Other than that… well you perhaps can feel flattered to know that some people in the other corner of the world (or perhaps not far from your office!) spend their time just duplicating what you did (without proper credit)!

This is a recurrent and “classic” topic in science and scientist’s ethics and behavior. As in any other life activity, some persons want to make progress quickly (too quick) and they are ready to do anything, even using other’s work. This is obviously unethical and also in some cases can be very risky (in fact when somebody is doing that is ruining the whole career and future). One simple case of plagiarism is to literally copy a previous paper (word by word in some parts) as in Brenda's case. In other situations, more elaborated approaches can be more difficult to discover. In last month editorial, the journal Nature Photonics (http://www.nature.com/nphoton/index.html) nicely touched this issue from different aspects.

...

I think, yes! First, as authors, especially those young ones, my recommendation is to completely avoid copy-paste from other papers into your manuscripts, even in a draft format. Many journals are using now specialized software to track papers by comparing with a database of those previously published. If you are so naive to have your own research, but you try to complete your paper with some paragraphs from other papers... you can be in serious troubles, so completely avoid that. Of course, I am assuming that you properly cite (see a previous post on citation code, http://pabloartal.blogspot.com/2008/10/to-be-cited-or-not-to-be-cited.html ) and that you only decide to write a paper based in your independent research and results.

We can do something else as reviewers and editors. It is still common and quite frustrating that a suspicious paper that was rejected in one journal, it is finally published in other one. Better mechanisms of sharing information between journals should be necessary. I know of several initiatives, but still we need to do more on this (ideas wellcome!). So, Brenda, I hope you feel better now knowing that at least you are not at all alone! Link to full post
 
via Researchblogging post

Global Information Technology Report 2008-2009. World Economic Forum

Posted by Celia Walter | 11 Jun, 2009

 

The Report stresses the importance of ICT as a catalyst for growth in the current global turmoil

Denmark and Sweden once again lead the rankings of The Global Information Technology Report 2008-2009, released for the eighth consecutive year by the World Economic Forum. The United States follows suit, up one position from last year, thus confirming its pre-eminence in networked readiness in the current times of economic slowdown. Singapore (4), Switzerland (5) and the other Nordic countries together with the Netherlands and Canada complete the top 10.

The Report underlines that good education fundamentals and high levels of technological readiness and innovation are essential engines of growth needed to overcome the current economic crisis. Under the theme “Mobility in a Networked World”, this year’s Report places a particular focus on the relationship and interrelations between mobility and ICT.

With record coverage of 134 economies worldwide, the Report remains the world’s most comprehensive and authoritative international assessment of the impact of ICT on the development process and the competitiveness of nations.

The Report is produced by the World Economic Forum in cooperation with INSEAD, the leading international business school, and is sponsored by Cisco Systems. [Published March 2009]

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