The ASIST collaborative book, Introduction to Information Science and Technology, is taking shape; 18 contributors have prepared draft chapters. Now we ask for help from ASIST in general to extend and improve the initial contributions. In 2009 we will create a (print) textbook from the electronic version. The collaborative book currently resides on a wiki in ASIST space. Please e-mail ralf shaw (shawd@indiana.edu) for authorization if you would like to contribute. ASIST's _Introduction to Information Science and Technology_ introduces undergraduate and graduate students to the field of information science and technology. It presents a clear, concise, and approachable account of the fundamental issues, with appropriate historical background and theoretical grounding (* indicates a section under construction): 1. Introduction Definitions Brief chronology *2. Information Needs, Seeking, and Use Information generation Information behavior Information needs Information seeking User studies 3. Information Representation and Organization Information structure Information analysis Semantics Subject access Indexing Controlled vocabularies Classification Metadata Information architecture *4. Computers and Networks Computing fundamentals Networking principles Computing over the Internet Network management 5. Structured Information Systems Systems analysis and design Conceptual modeling Relational databases Geographic information systems Artificial intelligence 6. Semi-structured and Unstructured Information Systems *Information storage and retrieval *Digital libraries *Electronic resources management Information visualization Evaluation of information systems *Human-computer interaction Usability 7. Social Informatics Organizations and institutions Information dissemination Information industry/market Strategic intelligence Organization of work Information management Bibliometrics/citation analysis 8. Information Policy Economics Intellectual property Standardization (Free) flow of information Ethics 9. Information Profession Distribution of knowledge *Information services/agencies *Intellectual freedom *Mission *Values 10. Theoretical Issues Information theory Network theory *Paradigm theory *Social epistemology *Philosophy of information 11. Knowledge Management and the Future of Information Science *Globalization and the Knowledge Economy *Key Drivers in KM *Social Capital and Social Computing *Knowledge Management Practices *Knowledge Management Strategies Information & Knowledge Professionals *Emerging Trends _______________________________________________ Asist-announce mailing list Asist-announce@mail.asis.org http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/asist-announce
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