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    Dawn Scheidel Bish LIS 666 Reflections Paper

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    Reflections Paper

    LIS 666

    Dr. J. Hersberger

    I start my reflections paper with two quotes from the ALA website about intellectual

    freedom and censorship. These two issues are important to the ethical practice of

    librarianship and something that all librarians need to remember and be conscience of

    when dealing with patrons in the library, whether that person is an adult, student, child,

    special needs person or homeless person.

    Intellectual freedom is the right of every individual to both seek and receive information from all

    points of view without restriction. It provides for free access to all expressions of ideas through

    which any and all sides of a question, cause or movement may be explored.

    Intellectual freedom is the basis for our democratic system. We expect our people to be self-governors. But to do so responsibly, our citizenry must be well-informed. Libraries provide theideas and information, in a variety of formats, to allow people to inform themselves.

    Intellectual freedom encompasses the freedom to hold, receive and disseminate ideas.(American Library Association)

    A week ago I had an encounter with a reference librarian at Jackson Library. I was

    doing a bibliography on Autism and was looking for information on the Dewey DecimalSystem and what the actual codes meant after the decimal point for some of the books I

    was accessing. I had looked online and found that in order to find the information I

    needed the username and password for a website. I had this information at home but

    not readily available to me as I took cataloguing last semester. The conversation went

    something like this:

    Me: I need some information on Dewey Decimal System numbers and what the numbers mean after the

    decimal point. The reason I need this information is that the professor was requiring this information for

    my paper

    RL: I am sorry, but it is unethical for me to provide you with this information.

    Me: Unethical, how so? I am asking for the username and password, not for you to do my work for me. I

    have the information at home; I was hoping that the reference desk would have the information for me

    here so I could finish my paper.

    RL: Again, I make it my policy not to help LIS students with their projects because I had to take those

    classes myself and if I help you it would be unethical. The information can be found online.

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    Me: I know it could be found online. I had the website but not the information to access this information.

    RL: I am sorry, it would be unethical for me to help you

    Me: Okay, I will just wait until I get home to find the information.

    I was quite perplexed by the encounter and had a difficult time getting back to what Iwas working on. It is still bothering me as I am writing about this in my reflections paper

    for ethics and information. I give this as an example and would like to look at this more

    closely to determine if this was indeed unethical to provide me with the user name and

    password to the website that I needed. Velazquez, et al provides one with five

    questions to determine if an issue/problem/law is ethical. These questions are as

    follows:

    What benefits and what harms will each course of action produce, and which alternative will lead

    to the best overall consequences? What moral rights do the affected parties have, and which

    course of action best respects those rights? Which course of action treats everyone the same,

    except where there is a morally justifiable reason not to, and does not show favoritism ordiscrimination? Which course of action advances the common good? Which course of action

    develops moral virtues? (Velasques)

    The first question is: What benefits and what harm will each course of action produce

    and which alternative will lead to the best overall consequence? By not providing the

    information I needed, I was put out by it did not devastate the overall consequences.

    Yes, I would have to wait to finish my paper, but so what?

    The second question is: What moral rights do the affected parties have, and whichcourse of action best respects those rights? According to the ALA above, I have the

    right to both seek and receive information without restrictions. So in the case could be

    made that the reference librarian was not following the definition of intellectual freedom

    by not providing me with the information that I sought.

    The third question is: Which course of action treats everyone the same, except where

    there is a morally justifiable reason not to, and does not show favoritism or

    discrimination? The reference librarian made it a point of saying to me that she did not

    provide help specifically to LIS students, so this could be shown as a case of

    discrimination. If she had told me that she did not provide that information to anyone ordid not have this information then it would not show discrimination.

    The fourth question is: Which course of action advances the common good? I do not

    believe that in a single case like mine, it affects the common good at all. I am only one

    person working towards my MLIS. However, if she indeed makes it a point to not help

    LIS students, does this promote the common good? I would think not. By denying me

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    and other LIS students information, the reference librarian is denying the opportunity to

    help students learn the information that is needed to be a good librarian. Isnt part of

    being a librarian providing information to others and to create critical thinkers?

    The fifth question is: Which course of action develops moral virtues? By stating that

    she would not provide me with the information that I sought, was she trying to developmy moral virtues? The only answer I can come up with is that I am a mature,

    professional graduate student who has a moral belief system ingrained into my attitude

    towards others and I do not believe that either course of action would have changed my

    moral values.

    This was just one example of how a librarians attitudes and values affect others. All of

    us studying LIS must remember to place our attitude, stance and mindset about

    subjects at the door when we enter the library. In the words of ALA, It provides for free

    access to all expressions of ideas through which any and all sides of a question, cause

    or movement may be explored (American Library Association). In the end, anotherreference librarian came in after the first librarian left and voluntarily provided me with

    the information that I sought (username and password to OCLC).

    I learned a great deal in this class and had a good time while learning. One of the things

    that resonated for me was the information I found out about on CIPA while I was writing

    my papers. The Childrens Internet Protection Act was put into place to protect children

    from materials that are not suitable for minors. The ALA and ACLU sued as this was

    believed to be against First Amendment Rights of free speech. The decision was

    appealed to the United States Supreme Court in 2003 with the court upholding the law.

    The Solicitor General had argued that CIPA would not block constitutionally allowedspeech because the filter could be unblocked by an authorized person in the library at

    the request of an adult. The Court agreed with this argument and stated that filtered

    sites could be either unblocked or the filter disabled with ease at the request of an adult

    patron.

    However, while doing an action research project on filtering software, Cyndi Atwell and I

    interviewed ten librarians and found that not one librarian was able to unblock a filter

    without going through the IT department, at times taking up to three days for resolution.

    This information troubles me, as the Supreme Court is saying that it is easy to disable

    the filters, yet not one librarian was able to disable a filter. Does this not then make

    CIPA unconstitutional? CIPA is placed on all computers in the library of schools and

    public libraries, receiving certain government funding. This includes computers for adult

    access only. So, if the librarian is unable to disable the filter does this not mean that the

    person seeking the information is unable to access the information needed. Is this not a

    freedom of speech issue?

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    Another issue that resonated with me also involves CIPA and filtering software. There

    are still many children that only have access to the internet at school or at the library.

    This means that these children only have access to filtered websites and are at a

    disadvantage to children that have access to the internet at home that does not have

    filters. The problem with this is that the children without filtering have the ability to learn

    more from the internet because they have access to sites that are blocked by filtering.

    For example, one school system reported that The Declaration of Independence and

    the Bill of Rights were blocked. Other sites blocked were religious sites, the Bible and

    the Book of Mormon (Jaeger P. T., March 2009). This causes a gap in learning for those

    who do not have internet access at home.

    Finally, I was quite taken by a recent AT&T commercial that brought everything together

    for me. The commercial takes place at a spelling bee where they have not eliminated

    any of the contestants. The ending of the commercial just succinctly says: Access to

    the internet makes us smarter. What will happen when everyone has it? Lets find out. Ibelieve that the commercial is a great comment on the necessity of internet access for

    all especially for children (and I have to add here, less filtered access). You can find the

    commercial on You Tube at:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ESMwyVxapck

    BibliographyAmerican Library Association. (n.d.). Retrieved April 25, 2010, from Intellectual Freedom Questions and

    Answers: http://www.ala.org/ala/aboutala/offices/oif/basics/ifcensorshipqanda.cfm

    Children's Internet Protection Act Study of Technology Protection Measures. (2003, August).

    www.ntia.doc.gov.Retrieved February 7, 2010, from National Telecommunicaitons and Information

    Administration: http://ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/ntiageneral/cipa2003/cipareport

    Jaeger, P. T. (March 2009). One Law with Two Outcomes: Comparing the Implementation of CIPA in

    Public Libraries and Schools. Information Technoloby and Libraries , 6-14.

    Velasques, M. A. (n.d.). Thinking Ethically: A Framework for Moral Decision Making. Retrieved February

    2010, from Marllula Center for Applied Ethics:

    http://www.scu.edu/ethics/publicatins/iie/v7n1/thinking.html

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ESMwyVxapckhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ESMwyVxapckhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ESMwyVxapckhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ESMwyVxapck
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