Virtual Worlds Best Practices in Education (VWBPE) Conference Talk
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Transcript of Virtual Worlds Best Practices in Education (VWBPE) Conference Talk
Shannon Bohle, MLIS Virtual Worlds Best Practices in Education
3rd Annual Conference, Second Life March 12, 2010
The Neil A. Armstrong Library and Archives
“That’s One Small Step for a Virtual World Library, One Giant Leap for Education!”
Credentialing and Recognition
Archivist at ALA’s FIN Conference
Migration of “Real World” Experiences into Virtual World Environments
Nobel Laureate Jim Watson, co-discoverer of the structure of DNA, with Shannon Bohleat CSHL library
Teaching and learning science means asking and answering the big questions, like “What is Life?” “How did life evolve?” and “Where in the universe can life be found?”
Bohle’s Lecture at Oxford History of Science
The Ability to Question is the Foundation of Learning
Modeling DNA and proteins in 3DFrom Bohle’s CSHL grant draft to p53 backbone in Second Life
Learning Modalities at the Library
Establishing Subject Matter ExpertiseUsing the Virtual World for Science Learning
Bohle’s Nature publication, “Studying the Causes of Cancer: Creating the First 3d Model of p53 in a Synthetic Immersive Environment”http://blogs.nature.com/ub51cd45e/2010/03/12/studying-the-causes-of-cancer-creating-the-first-3d-model-of-p53-in-a-synthetic-immersive-environmen
Science Friday, NPR. Question answered by Mark Sykes, Director of the Planetary Science Institute:"In terms of lunar exploration, what about other countries, and what does this mean for geopolitics?" http://www.sciencefriday.com/program/archives/200911202 transcript: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=120613250
Just like students, a good reference librarian never loses the ability to ask great questions.
Learning through Questioning
Archivist Asks:Bill Nye “The Science Guy” and Louis Friedman
Archivist asks,“How will the ‘New NASA Plan’ handle International Cooperation and make changes to ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations)?”
As a former journalist & experienced librarian,
I am usually not intimidated from
asking uncomfortable questions.
Freedom of Information Open, Transparent
Government
Archivist asks John Mather, Nobel Laureate in Physics, 2006: "Can results from Planck prove inflation paradigm?" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aN9uaAEXnbY
Is the universe really expanding?
NASA’s Dr. Mather in Second Life
Going to the Source—Sometimes it is not a web page, or a virtual book, but a person!
Celebrating the Past
Inspiring Future Generations through Role-play
The Future is Now
Outreach
Preparation for the Job Market
Web 2.0 Integration with Second Life
• RSS Feeds (NASA Breaking News, Current Space Shuttle Mission Updates, Hubblecast)
•Twitter (Current Astronauts, Former Astronauts, International Astronauts, NASA Centers, CoLabLibrary)
• Started New Flickr Groups Most successful was the “Apollo 11 40th Anniversary Celebrations Around the World”
(207 members, 1,177 items)
SUBJECT SPECIFIC LIBRARY HOLDINGS
12 full-text NASA digitized books, some over 300 pages long1 Technical Report
1 Serial Publication, NASA News & Notes12 Reference Desk Pathfinders
• NASA Digital Collections• NASA Archives
•NASA Technical Data• NASA Libraries
• Tuskegee Airmen• NASA
• NASA CoLab• Space Medicine
• Women• SL Science Places and Events• Libraries, Archives, Museums
• Search SL
ARCHIVAL HOLDINGS
200+ aeronautics and astronautics archival items 5 Years of unique, “born virtual” NASA CoLab meeting transcripts
Donations
STATS
CoLab Island 24,044 in the last 319 days
(75 unique visitors per day on average)
Neil A. Armstrong Library & Archives 8,533 in the last 348 days
(24 unique visitors—about 1/3 of the total island visitors--per day on average)
191,448 minutes by 8,533 visitors in the last 348 days (22 minutes spent in the library per visitor on average)
Statistics provided by: Super Greeter 5.6
SIM-Radar Ultra-Edition 9.1a (Normal)
Results of a Survey in ProgressData Set: 47 Respondents
Preliminary Findings: Half of the respondents (51.1%) used a web-based reference service prior to using a virtual world library reference service• Of those making the transition, the majority found it “Easy” (21.1%) to “Moderate” (23.4%) in difficulty, while only a few (2.1%) found it “Hard”• Of the respondents who used either or both service, a higher number had tried virtual world library reference service than had tried web-based reference service• In terms of attrition rate, virtual world libraries showed slightly higher attrition rate compared to web based reference service (14.9% had visited web based reference services 13 or more times whereas that figure was only 12.8 % for virtual world reference service.• Of those who had not tried any internet reference services, or only one service, their interest in trying a NEW service was for the most part “High” (23.4%)• Of the traditional Reference Services available, in both brick and mortar and virtual settings, participants “Recommended” in-person situations, while primarily feeling Web-based and telephone services to be of “Good” quality. • The majority of respondents had not tried virtual world libraries, but of those who did, respondents replies were closely divided between “Adequate,” “Good” or “Recommended.”
Results of a Survey in ProgressData Set: 47 Respondents
Sample Comments:
“I found the results to be less useful, because I was being directed to web pages I had already accessed on my own. In order to be more than just a ‘Google Helper’, virtual reference needs to make use of deep web resources.”
“Virtual world reference was more direct with the person visible and doing things in front of me and the chat was more active, greater sense of presence”
“I found the virtual world reference experience more enriching and more interactive than the web-based experience. However, it was quite difficult to find the service point in the virtual world (Second Life). This difficulty in way finding exists throughout Second Life (and I understand most existing virtual worlds), compared to the now standard ‘Ask a Librarian’ or simply "ASK!" buttons on library web pages.”
“The idea of 24 hour service meaning that librarians are from anywhere in the world and not my local (or even state wide)library system causes some problems. It is the same as calling UPS and having the operator be in Guam, difficult to ask for specifics, the librarian on the phone may not know everything that I need to know simply because they are unfamiliar with my physical location or the library system that I use.”
“For my purposes, discussion is normally required…so in person with a librarian is great”
Q&A Discussion