BPS Research Digest: Psychologists on Twitter - 0 views
Twitter Journal Club | #TwitJC - 0 views
Great Twitter guide for university research, teaching and impact activities f... - 0 views
Twitter Journal Club - 0 views
Social media - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views
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The honeycomb framework defines how social media services focus on some or all of seven functional building blocks (identity, conversations, sharing, presence, relationships, reputation, and groups).
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By applying a set of theories in the field of media research (social presence, media richness) and social processes (self-presentation, self-disclosure) Kaplan and Haenlein created a classification scheme for different social media types in their Business Horizons article published in 2010. According to Kaplan and Haenlein there are six different types of social media: collaborative projects (e.g., Wikipedia), blogs and microblogs (e.g., Twitter), content communities (e.g., YouTube), social networking sites (e.g., Facebook), virtual game worlds (e.g., World of Warcraft), and virtual social worlds (e.g. Second Life). Technologies include: blogs, picture-sharing, vlogs, wall-postings, email, instant messaging, music-sharing, crowdsourcing and voice over IP, to name a few. Many of these social media services can be integrated via social network aggregation platforms. Social media network websites include sites like Facebook, Twitter, Bebo and MySpace.
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he authors explain that each of the seven functional building blocks has important implications for how firms should engage with social media. By analyzing identity, conversations, sharing, presence, relationships, reputation, and groups, firms can monitor and understand how social media activities vary in terms of their function and impact, so as to develop a congruent social media strategy based on the appropriate balance of building blocks for their community.[2]
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The Digital Citizen - My Sojourn in the World of Web 2.0 by Irene Watts-Politza - 3 views
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“You are interacting with one single individual at all times. There is no ‘class’ …”
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“Design a course with the student perspective, one who has never taken an online course before” (Pickett, What Works?).
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I must find a balance, however, in order to complete the necessary tasks well so I can savor the doing of those that have salience.
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Student Reflections @wattspoi on "Heutagogy & its Implications for Evaluative Feedback" http://t.co/xiuWsCsD #lrnchat #edchat
JOLT - Journal of Online Learning and Teaching - 0 views
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Classroom community and student engagement are closely related to one another
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sense of connectedness and psychological closeness rather than isolation are better prepared to become more actively involved with online learning and the resulting higher order thinking and knowledge building
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text-based experiences are likely insufficient for participants to break down the barriers created by distance and the lack of face-to-face interaction.
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