Title
Learning To Become A Better Poet: Situated Information Practices In, Of, And At A Japanese Tanka Gathering
Abstract
Introduction. This paper contributes to the growing body of practice-based and empirical approaches to information science research that examines the ways members of a community engage in mundane and everyday information-related activities. Particular attention to the situated practices from which collective and collaborative learning arises is paid.Method. Observations at a series of gatherings of a group of Japanese poets were conducted. Audio-visual materials were recorded to repeatedly scrutinize the doings of the gathering and information behaviour thereof.Analysis. An ethnomethodological approach was taken to explicate embodied practices and their seen-but-unnoticed features that members work out to accomplish. In addition to how information is being put to use, what counts as information is addressed.Findings. A variety of information activities occurred simultaneously, sequentially, and orderly to accomplish practical and organizational activities. Information seeking, for example, did not occur in isolation from other information activities. Over the course of members' work, it was interrelated with information sharing and information creation as well as with the use of artefacts that surround the participants.Conclusions. The findings reveal that information behaviour is organized as the interaction unfolds, which suggests an alternative view to the traditional approaches in information behaviour that constructs theoretical models to predict information behaviour as a goal. Practices that shape, use, and share knowledge that is both tacit and explicit are also identified. For the participants, none of the practices is remarkable. This, in turn, evidences that they assemble the naturally occurring and mundane activities of the gathering in its organizational terms.
Year
Venue
Field
2015
INFORMATION RESEARCH-AN INTERNATIONAL ELECTRONIC JOURNAL
Tanka,Situated,Information practices,Media studies,Computer science,Knowledge management
DocType
Volume
Issue
Journal
20
1
ISSN
Citations 
PageRank 
1368-1613
0
0.34
References 
Authors
0
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Shinichiro Sakai161.58
Ron Korenaga200.34
Tomomi Shigeyoshi Sakai300.34