lter im articulation work: developing community web recommendations nicole kaplan (sgs), karen baker...

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LTER IM Articulation Work: LTER IM Articulation Work: Developing Community Web Recommendations Developing Community Web Recommendations Nicole Kaplan (SGS), Karen Baker (CCE, PAL), Barbara Benson (NTL), Eda Melendez-Colom (LUQ), Corinna Gries (CAP), and Nicole Kaplan (SGS), Karen Baker (CCE, PAL), Barbara Benson (NTL), Eda Melendez-Colom (LUQ), Corinna Gries (CAP), and Jim Laundre (ARC) Jim Laundre (ARC) Background Background IM Working Group Formed to Develop IM Working Group Formed to Develop Recommendations in Response to Recommendations in Response to Challenges of First Generation Web Challenges of First Generation Web Sites: Sites: Challenges: Data Accessibility and Usability Site Navigation Network Identity Communication of Research News Web technology and content categories evolve * This working group will continue to review and update recommendations to accommodate changes in technology and delivery mechanisms, as well as conceptual understandings, organizational categories, social perspectives, community elements, and synthesis strategies. Group’s Efforts are an Example of Group’s Efforts are an Example of Articulation Work: Articulation Work: IM Working Group IM Working Group Developed Recommendations with Developed Recommendations with explicit elaboration and attention to explicit elaboration and attention to alignment of multiple elements alignment of multiple elements . . Surveyed IM community to qualify user input Identified User Audiences, which addresses social and organizational elements of web site design. Shared successful navigational and organizational components of LTER web sites, which recognizes successful technical and organizational elements of web site design. Recommended categories of information to contain similar content from site to site, which includes social and organizational elements of web sites design. Created design elements and links that represent the site as part of a network, which have community and technical elements. . Future Plans of this Working Group to Future Plans of this Working Group to Perform Articulation Work: Perform Articulation Work: Explore the Site Description Directory (SiteDB) as a portal to standardized data, metadata and other information and to content organized content uniformly Explore links to standardized personnel, climate, bibliographic, etc. information via other all-site databases managed by Network office Explore data discovery using EML and Metacat query tools Keep updated on new web technologies Keep updated on new information concepts What is Articulation Work? What is Articulation Work? Articulation work is described as work that enables other work such as within a task, within a project, or across organizational entities. Articulation work refers to the interrelating of parts or the alignment of work elements, often involving a range of planning, coordinating, and negotiating efforts. Over the past year or two this group has worked to align a set of social, technical and organizational elements.* Another Example of Articulation Work Another Example of Articulation Work Designing for Diversity: Designing for Diversity: Where Local and Network Perspectives Where Local and Network Perspectives Meet Meet The figure above is the LTER Site Profiles page, the portal into the LTER Site Description Directory. The figure to the left illustrates the parallel development of site and Network Web Pages and represents a type of articulation work. This approach recognizes both local and standardized practices as valid and as contributing to system development. Note, plans for a periodic review of the web recommendations is key to establishing both an expectation of change and a process for change. Site Local Identity Via Home Page Site Network Identity Via SiteDB Web Review WG Loca l Pers p ect iv e Ne two rk Perspec tive * See ASM Poster Millerand and Baker, Research in Infrastructure Studies: Social & Organizational Perspectives on Ecological Data Management; Baker and Millerand, Articulation Work Supporting Information Infrastructure Design. HICSS-40 2007 (in press) Karasti and Baker (2004) describe “three interdependent elements of science, data and technology for which information management provides support” and “the articulation work through which they [IMs] engage in balancing the tensions between the often-contradictory prerequisites inherent to long-term ecological information management”. These future plans will continue to take into account multiple elements that go into successful web design and create articulation work.

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Page 1: LTER IM Articulation Work: Developing Community Web Recommendations Nicole Kaplan (SGS), Karen Baker (CCE, PAL), Barbara Benson (NTL), Eda Melendez-Colom

LTER IM Articulation Work: LTER IM Articulation Work: Developing Community Web RecommendationsDeveloping Community Web Recommendations

Nicole Kaplan (SGS), Karen Baker (CCE, PAL), Barbara Benson (NTL), Eda Melendez-Colom (LUQ), Corinna Gries (CAP), and Jim Laundre (ARC)Nicole Kaplan (SGS), Karen Baker (CCE, PAL), Barbara Benson (NTL), Eda Melendez-Colom (LUQ), Corinna Gries (CAP), and Jim Laundre (ARC)

BackgroundBackgroundIM Working Group Formed to Develop IM Working Group Formed to Develop Recommendations in Response to Challenges of Recommendations in Response to Challenges of First Generation Web Sites:First Generation Web Sites:

Challenges: Data Accessibility and Usability Site Navigation Network Identity Communication of Research News Web technology and content categories evolve

* This working group will continue to review and update recommendations to accommodate changes in technology and delivery mechanisms, as well as conceptual understandings, organizational categories, social perspectives, community elements, and synthesis strategies.

Group’s Efforts are an Example of Articulation Group’s Efforts are an Example of Articulation Work: Work: IM Working Group Developed IM Working Group Developed Recommendations with explicit elaboration and Recommendations with explicit elaboration and attention to alignment of multiple elementsattention to alignment of multiple elements. .

Surveyed IM community to qualify user input

Identified User Audiences, which addresses social and organizational elements of web site design.

Shared successful navigational and organizational components of LTER web sites, which recognizes successful technical and organizational elements of web site design.

Recommended categories of information to contain similar content from site to site, which includes social and organizational elements of web sites design.

Created design elements and links that represent the site as part of a network, which have community and technical elements.

.

Future Plans of this Working Group to Perform Future Plans of this Working Group to Perform Articulation Work:Articulation Work:

Explore the Site Description Directory (SiteDB) as a portal to standardized data, metadata and other information and to content organized content uniformly

Explore links to standardized personnel, climate, bibliographic, etc. information via other all-site databases managed by Network office

Explore data discovery using EML and Metacat query tools

Keep updated on new web technologies

Keep updated on new information concepts

What is Articulation Work?What is Articulation Work?

Articulation work is described as work that enables other work such as within a task, within a project, or across organizational entities. Articulation work refers to the interrelating of parts or the alignment of work elements, often involving a range of planning, coordinating, and negotiating efforts. Over the past year or two this group has worked to align a set of social, technical and organizational elements.*

Another Example of Articulation WorkAnother Example of Articulation WorkDesigning for Diversity: Designing for Diversity:

Where Local and Network Perspectives MeetWhere Local and Network Perspectives Meet

The figure above is the LTER Site Profiles page, the portal into the LTER Site Description Directory. The figure to the left illustrates the parallel development of site and Network Web Pages and represents a type of articulation work. This approach recognizes both local and standardized practices as valid and as contributing to system development. Note, plans for a periodic review of the web recommendations is key to establishing both an expectation of change and a process for change.

Site Local IdentityVia Home Page

Site Network IdentityVia SiteDB

WebReview

WG

Loca

lP

ersp

ectiv

e Netw

ork

Perspective

* See ASM Poster Millerand and Baker, Research in Infrastructure Studies: Social & Organizational Perspectives on Ecological Data Management; Baker and Millerand, Articulation Work Supporting Information Infrastructure Design. HICSS-40 2007 (in press)

Karasti and Baker (2004) describe “three interdependent elements of science, data and technology for which information management provides support” and “the articulation work through which they [IMs] engage in balancing the tensions between the often-contradictory prerequisites inherent to long-term ecological information management”.

These future plans will continue to take into account multiple elements that go into successful web design and create articulation work.