Thursday, March 31, 2011

The Research Heart

Allison Druin, Associate Dean for Research, iSchool

Recently my father spent some time in the hospital and I had to enjoy the life of an Associate Dean from cell phones, Skype, email, and Twitter.  After a week away, I came back to College Park and the iSchool to find a community of colleagues who picked up extra tasks for me; left me cards, flowers, and chocolate; and even distracted me with the pleasure of intellectual discussion and work.  When I came back it seemed endless committee meetings seemed shorter.  Passionate discussions on college policies were surprisingly fascinating.  And research in the lab with even the grumpiest of children seemed a blessing.

My short time away reminded me of the importance of community. Colleagues that are not just smart and supportive, but colleagues that care deeply about the people they work, think, and change the world with.  In the scholarly literature we will many times call this the “sociability” of a community, but I it may go beyond that to the very heart of a community.  I believe how we share life’s challenges, and inspirations, can suggest how successfully we can weave new paths that truly matter in our research.  When problems are hard, resources are tight, and the only possibilities for success seem like miracles to achieve, the heart of a community cannot be overlooked.

With this in mind, over the last six months my iSchool colleagues and I created something we call “Research Communities.”  These are communities that cross disciplines, centers, and labs.  They are communities in our iSchool that bring together talented faculty, staff, and students with truly hard problems to solve—that cannot be undertaken without the research expertise and passion of many over an extended period of time. These communities include:

Seeing the Unseen: This Research Community looks to make knowledge creation, organization and management more transparent with visualization tools, large scale analysis through cloud computing, and by exploring government policies and implications.

The Future of the Past: This Research Community seeks to understand how library and archival materials and processes can suggest how we move forward in the future to preserve, organize, and prioritize what we know.

Co-Global Participation: This Research Community works to support the diverse and underserved populations by co-designing, developing, and integrating inclusive information, services, and new technologies.

The iLabSchool: This Research Community explores the future of education to promote systemic changes in learning, teaching, and assessment through the design of new technologies, learning experiences, and content materials.

For example initiatives in each of our research communities and which iSchool colleagues are involved, you can explore a recent presentation we gave.

iSchool-Research-Communities22711

One important characteristic of these research communities is that they are not only made up of colleagues here in the iSchool, but are made up of many and diverse organizations which include the Encyclopedia of Life, the U.S. Library of Congress, Google, Twitter, Prince George’s County & D.C. Public Schools, the Institute for Museum and Library Services, the National Science Foundation, the U.S. National Park Service and many more.

Another important aspect of these research communities is that they will evolve as the hard problems and people involved do.  The heart of these research communities are people with driving problems, inspiring ideas, and a passion to make change.  If you or your organization has this research heart come visit us, explore our research, and become a part of our communities.

The Research Stories of our College...