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Areas of ResearchThe major areas of research and doctoral specialization in GSLIS are history, economics, policy; information organization and knowledge representation; information resources, uses, and users; information systems; management and evaluation; social, community, and organizational informatics; and youth literature and services. Below are descriptions of each of these areas, along with the names of the faculty whose research primarily identifies them with that area. History, economics, policyThe study of information in historical and political-economic contexts is as profoundly important as it is undeveloped. GSLIS has a fundamental commitment to this field, and believes its significance will be increasingly widely recognized. Subjects of particular interest include:
Faculty working in this area Elichirigoity Information organization and knowledge representationFaculty working in this area Dubin Information resources, uses, and usersFaculty working in this areaMacMullen Information systemsDigital information forms an increasingly essential part of transactions in education, industry and government. Although librarians' and archivists' roles are independent of the form in which information is expressed, the nature of digital information both poses challenges for the design of the information environments that they manage and presents opportunities to expand the services that they can provide. Addressing these challenges and opportunities raises a wide range of research questions, bearing on various information genres, user communities, stages of the information life cycle, and architectural concerns for systems and services. Particular areas of focus for digital library research at the University of Illinois include: Document modeling; knowledge representation systems; information retrieval; automatic text classification and mining; multimedia information management; human-computer interfaces; multi-agent systems; knowledge management systems; information quality; information use in scientific and scholarly work; interoperability efforts on the use of digital collections; healthcare informatics; biodiversity informatics; digital preservation. Faculty working in this areaManagement and evaluationFaculty working in this areaSocial, community, and organizational informaticsSocial informatics as an area of research seeks to understand the way information and communication systems and technologies shape and are shaped by the social context of their creation and use. Studies explore what pre-existing practices in information and communication produce particular designs and uses of information systems, how invisible technical and social infrastructures facilitate or limit access to information resources, and how anticipated and unanticipated appropriations of technology lead to new uses and practices. A further aspect of the field is the exploitation of information technology as a tool to understand social relationships. Research includes both descriptive and analytic accounts of these relationships as well as studies of ethical and policy questions. Since information systems pre-date computing technology, the field considers historical and philosophical foundations as well. Example questions include:
Specific topic areas include: community informatics; distributed collective practice; collaboration systems for online work, learning, and knowledge distribution; e-learning in school, university, corporate, and lifelong learning settings; educational informatics; information technology applied to societal problems; social impacts of technologies; equitable access and social justice; new literacies; evaluation of emerging technologies; studies of appropriation and diffusion of technologies. Faculty working in this areaAlkalimat Youth literature and servicesYouth services librarianship is a rich concentration involving the study of children's and young adult literature; storytelling and folklore in the oral tradition; young reader/writer interactions in multiple literacies; and librarianship in public and school settings. Questions that drive research in this area include the following:
Faculty working in this area
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HEADLINESTwelve Students Honored with Grants GSLIS Students Named Diversity Scholars Guide Highlights Best Gift Books for Youth For Improving Early Literacy, Reading Comics is No Child's Play UPCOMING EVENTSBrownbag discussion about community archiving (Dec 3) Geographic Information Systems (GIS) Fair 2009 (Dec 9) Faculty Meeting (Dec 9) Ian Brooks: Designing a Culturally Sensitive Interface for an Endemic Disease Cyberenvironment (Dec 16) 2009 Downs Intellectual Freedom Award Reception (Jan 16) iConference 2010 (Feb 3 - Feb 6) Faculty Meeting (Feb 10) Faculty Meeting (Mar 3) |