Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Introduction

Good Morning all! My name is Elizabeth Layton, and I am a padawan librarian. There are many who have come before me, and many who will follow, but there is only one of me. I am the serial and acquisition coordinator at the University of Montevallo, which is incidentally also my alma mater. I love the university and am very proud to come from a liberal arts school, but I am just as proud to join the University of Alabama as a student in their MLIS distance learning program.

How IT savvy am I? I suppose that's rather hard to place on a scale. I am by no means frightened of technology and I usually pick up new skills rather quickly, but there is still just so much I don't know. I am familiar with BCC because of how much I write in forums. I am familiar with the concept of html, but not the actual process of writing out code. I love the feeling of learning new things, which is why I chose this blogging site instead of WordPress. I've been blogging on WordPress for more than four years, and wanted to try something new. In fact, I've already found that I like this much more than WordPress, because I can change fonts without paying for it. I believe there will always be a slight case of nerves as with anything I do that I'm not familiar with, but I'm really looking forward to what I can absorb from this online class experience.

During the process of reflecting on my IT knowledge, I asked my mother some questions about her knowledge of current technology and how she used or didn't use it and why. She had a great many answers, including some to avoid the questions, but for the most part, my mother is techno-phobic. I asked her why, in which she said "it just isn't the same as when I used computers". You see, my mother is very educated, but she also went to college in the late 1970's. She used to wire old computers when they used punch cards for code, and she knew how to make the cards, but she says that modern technology is far to intimidating. It doesn't have to be though. The internet, your phone, computers; they don't have to be "scary" or "overwhelming". I work with my mother every day to try and improve her knowledge. Just last week we worked on GoogleDocs.

This project has brought one question to my attention though. Is there really a such thing as over saturation? I was speaking with a coworker about this the other day. What happens when you reach your limit? Is there a limit to our understanding? Will this generation be like the other passing generations that might have at one time been on the technology wagon, but for one reason or another they eventually decided to jump off? As someone who has always wanted to learn new things, to absorb all that I can about computers, and apps, and anything in between, it is truly frightening to me that if a breaking point really exists, then where will my career be one day? And how does one prevent this from happening?

3 comments:

  1. The force is strong with this blog. Love it!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I like the questions you bring up about IT literacy/fluency. I think there is an over saturation already, but I also think programmers seem to realize this and program in functions that are very similar when transferring from one device to another, which can make learning to use new devices easier.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Did your mom go through a period of not keeping up with changing technology? I imagine if you took a few years off from the the tech world and then tried to jump back in, it would be pretty intimidating. Thanks for the interesting read!

    ReplyDelete