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New Technologies for Access: An Interview with Vijay Kumar
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| Vijay Kumar |
Dr. Vijay Kumar is Assistant Provost and Director of Academic Computing at MIT, and is working on the interface between technology and education. He is also a member of the Applications Strategy Council for Internet2 and Principal Investigator of the Open Knowledge Initiative. Here he shares with Library Connect readers his thoughts on what new initiatives and technologies are in the pipeline to help students, teachers, researchers and others take advantage of digital resources.
LC: In a very general sense, how easy will it be for people in future to have access to digital resources?
Vijay Kumar: All dimensions, from production and delivery to access, suggest a world where it will be increasingly easy to access digital resources. On the supply side, more assets and resources are being digitized, meaning more content is available. If you look at difficulties in making content available be they technical, policy-related or intellectual property considerations you also see developments, such as the Creative Commons initiative. From a delivery perspective, extensive high-banded wireless networks and portable devices all point to easier access.
LC: How will this impact libraries?
Kumar: Libraries have always been important players in ensuring resources for educational scholarship are made available. Traditionally the library has organized these resources centrally. Now we are moving into a world where resources, in the form of digital media, are increasingly distributed, giving rise to new challenges and pressures. Providing access to this information and preserving it for future generations is a rapidly moving target. For libraries to continue to serve as stewards of information they must increasingly accommodate this changing technological environment.
Sophisticated tools now perform some of the functions of a traditional reference librarian. But that does not diminish the value librarians bring through being expert in these tools, coordinating distributed information into meaningful forms, and ensuring users are equipped to access it.
LC: Can you say a bit about MIT’s Open Course Ware project?
Kumar: Open Course Ware is doing wonderfully, with 1,100 of 1,800 courses available and the remaining 700 on track to be published between now and 2007. Worldwide access numbers for OCW of more than five million users have exceeded our expectations and demonstrate MIT got it right in terms of unfettered access to materials. The OCW model has taken root. More than one hundred universities around the world are creating their own sites. The MIT community takes great pride in the fact that people are using OCW to strengthen their own teaching materials. If you make resources widely available the quality of educational discourse changes; that those kinds of impacts are also beginning to surface is particularly pleasing.
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