Internet filters and academic freedom : librarian and stakeholder perceptions and their impact on access to information

Background. Filtering software is used in libraries to block Web-based content; this includes parts or all of certain websites, ranges of IP addresses, as well as key word level sifting of search results that delete or do not return all possible and alternative content. There are academic institutio...

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Main Authors: Orenstein, David I., Stoll-Ron, Lisa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/154260
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1542602021-12-22T20:11:38Z Internet filters and academic freedom : librarian and stakeholder perceptions and their impact on access to information Orenstein, David I. Stoll-Ron, Lisa Library and information science Background. Filtering software is used in libraries to block Web-based content; this includes parts or all of certain websites, ranges of IP addresses, as well as key word level sifting of search results that delete or do not return all possible and alternative content. There are academic institutions that actively do filter access to the Internet for their students, faculty and staff. Objective. How do librarians and other key campus stakeholders view the use of Internet filters? The data presented in this paper comes from a cross-institutional study which surveyed senior administrators, IT professionals, faculty and librarians to gauge their views related to use of Internet filters. Methods. The data selected for this article focuses on a comparative analysis of responses to questionnaires completed by both librarians and senior administrators. However, other outcome data will be discussed for all participant groups. Results. Results suggest that while librarians as a professional group stand firmly for open access and against filters, academic administrators are split on the role filters play in denying access to Internet content. While faculty and IT staff each view the necessity and value of filters with varying degree of approval. Significance. These perceptions have policy implications related to academic freedom for teaching, learning and for academic libraries and IT departments, as well as their parent institutions. Published version 2021-12-16T06:52:37Z 2021-12-16T06:52:37Z 2014 Journal Article Orenstein, D. I. & Stoll-Ron, L. (2014). Internet filters and academic freedom : librarian and stakeholder perceptions and their impact on access to information. Library and Information Science Research E-Journal, 24(2), 62-74. https://dx.doi.org/10.32655/LIBRES.2014.2.1 1058-6768 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/154260 10.32655/LIBRES.2014.2.1 2 24 62 74 en Library and Information Science Research E-Journal © 2014 David I. Orenstein, Lisa Stoll-Ron. All rights reserved. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Library and information science
spellingShingle Library and information science
Orenstein, David I.
Stoll-Ron, Lisa
Internet filters and academic freedom : librarian and stakeholder perceptions and their impact on access to information
description Background. Filtering software is used in libraries to block Web-based content; this includes parts or all of certain websites, ranges of IP addresses, as well as key word level sifting of search results that delete or do not return all possible and alternative content. There are academic institutions that actively do filter access to the Internet for their students, faculty and staff. Objective. How do librarians and other key campus stakeholders view the use of Internet filters? The data presented in this paper comes from a cross-institutional study which surveyed senior administrators, IT professionals, faculty and librarians to gauge their views related to use of Internet filters. Methods. The data selected for this article focuses on a comparative analysis of responses to questionnaires completed by both librarians and senior administrators. However, other outcome data will be discussed for all participant groups. Results. Results suggest that while librarians as a professional group stand firmly for open access and against filters, academic administrators are split on the role filters play in denying access to Internet content. While faculty and IT staff each view the necessity and value of filters with varying degree of approval. Significance. These perceptions have policy implications related to academic freedom for teaching, learning and for academic libraries and IT departments, as well as their parent institutions.
format Article
author Orenstein, David I.
Stoll-Ron, Lisa
author_facet Orenstein, David I.
Stoll-Ron, Lisa
author_sort Orenstein, David I.
title Internet filters and academic freedom : librarian and stakeholder perceptions and their impact on access to information
title_short Internet filters and academic freedom : librarian and stakeholder perceptions and their impact on access to information
title_full Internet filters and academic freedom : librarian and stakeholder perceptions and their impact on access to information
title_fullStr Internet filters and academic freedom : librarian and stakeholder perceptions and their impact on access to information
title_full_unstemmed Internet filters and academic freedom : librarian and stakeholder perceptions and their impact on access to information
title_sort internet filters and academic freedom : librarian and stakeholder perceptions and their impact on access to information
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/154260
_version_ 1720447179185717248