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Joanne S

2012 Horizon Report | EDUCAUSE.edu - 0 views

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    Please read the Key Trends and the Critical Challenges sections at the start. The rest of the report is a very easy read if you are interested. Johnson, L., Adams, S., & Cummins, M. (2012). The NMC Horizon Report: 2012 Higher Education Edition. Austin, Texas: The New Media Consortium. Retrieved from http://www.educause.edu/Resources/2012HorizonReport/246056
Joanne S

Learning together: using social media to foster collaboration in higher education - 0 views

  • The personal benefits of social bookmarking are obvious to anyone who works on more than one computer. By storing bookmarks on the Internet (or in “the cloud”), social bookmarking services like Diigo,
  • How Can Social Bookmarking Enable Collaborative Working?
  • have been judged by a human to have some value.
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  • population of users on a particular social bookmarking site influences not only the amount but also the type and quality of bookmarks in the system.
  • In all these examples, the community of users is an important factor in ensuring the quality of the resources bookmarked in the system.
  • Social bookmarking tools allow users to classify their bookmarks by assigning tags
  • With regard to information literacy instruction, Luo (2010) found evidence that librarians are using tags to present course-specific resources to students.
  • hey can also be used to engage students in resource discovery
  • This use of social bookmarking initiated from a need to simply collect and share resources but has yielded other benefits. Traditionally in projects of this type, librarians collate lists of resources that are then passed on to the web developer to turn into a web page. This is fairly labour intensive for the web developer and means that any time subject librarians want to add or edit links they have to submit the changes to the web developer. Scholar includes a tool that allows RSS feeds to be created from searches of Scholar tags. In this case, the web developer just created links to the Scholar feeds – rather than manually creating lists of links and descriptions in HTML. As well as saving the initial job of manually creating HTML pages, it allows the page to be dynamic. If a subject librarian wants to add a web resource to the page, all they have to do is to bookmark that page with the appropriate tags in Scholar. The new webpage is automatically added to the feed without the need for the intervention of the web developer.
  • librarians can share each other's discoveries.
Joanne S

Humanities: Schools & Departments - Practicum Documents - 0 views

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    "Practicum Students' Webpage"
Joanne S

Wikis in Plain English - YouTube - 0 views

    • Joanne S
       
      Welcome to Wikis in Plain English. These four friends are going on a camping trip. They need to bring the right supplies because they're backpacking. The group needs to plan and plan well, so coordination is key. They're all computer users, so they start planning with an email. It's start with one, but then becomes a barrage. Email is not good at coordinating and organizing a group's input. This is the old way - Booo! The important information is scattered across everyone's inbox. This isn't coordination! Let's start over. There is a better way. It requires using a website called a wiki. Using a wiki, the group can coordinate their trip better. This is the new way - yaay! Most wikis work the same. They make it easy for everyone to change what appears on a webpage with a click of a button. It's as easy as erasing a word and rewriting it. The buttons are really important. There are two that are essential. They are "edit" and "save", and they are always used together. Let's see them in action. Here are our camping friends and here is a wiki website. Like all wikis, it has an edit button. Clicking this button, transforms the webpage into a document. All you have to do is click it and the webpage becomes a document ready for editing. Editing the page means you can add or remove words or change how they look, just like writing a letter. Once you're finished editing, you click save and the document becomes a webpage once again, and is ready for the next person to edit it - easy! Edit - Write - and Save. Using this process, a group can coordinate more easily. Let's apply this to our camping friends, who need to bring the right supplies. Mary signs up for a wiki site and then sees the new site for the first time. She clicks the edit button to get started. She creates two lists for camping: What we have and what we need. Under "we have" she lists the things she will bring: A cooler, stove and flashlight. Under "we need" she lists items
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    Wikis in Plain English. (2007). . Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dnL00TdmLY
Joanne S

LTTO Episodes | COFA Online Gateway - 0 views

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    COFA Online. (2011, March 1). Understanding Creative Commons - case study. Retrieved April 29, 2011, from http://online.cofa.unsw.edu.au/learning-to-teach-online/ltto-episodes?view=video&video=239
Joanne S

Archives & Museum Informatics: Museums and the Web 2009: Paper: Gow, V. et al., Making ... - 0 views

  • New Zealand content difficult to discover, share and use
  • DigitalNZ is testing ways to create digital content, collect and share existing digital content, and build smart, freely available search and discovery tools.
  • Memory Maker blurs the line between consuming and producing content. What’s sometimes called ‘remix culture’ […]. Digital technologies have opened up new possibilities for young people to access and represent the stories of their culture by taking sound and images and recombining them to say something new, something relevant to them. (Sarah Jones, Lunch Box: Software & digital media for learning, November 2008) http://lunchbox.org.nz/2008/11/get-coming-home-on-your-schools-website-wiki-or-blog/)
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  • The Memory Maker provides a taste of what is possible when collecting institutions modernise their practices for keeping and managing copyright information, using Creative Commons licenses or ‘no known copyright’ statements.
  • Learning about ‘hyperlinks’ today, these young New Zealanders will be the developers and creators of tomorrow.
  • The full set of contributions is accessible through a Coming Home search tool, occasionally on a google-like hosted search page (Figure 5), but more often through a search widget embedded on many New Zealand Web sites (Figure 6).
  • Digital New Zealand is developing and testing solutions that showcase what’s possible when we really focus on improving access to and discovery of New Zealand content.
  • Technically, the Digital New Zealand system is in three parts: a backend, a metadata store, and a front end.
  • The coolest thing to be done with your data will be thought of by someone else
  • “an API is basically a way to give developers permission to hack into your database”.
    • Joanne S
       
      George Oates
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    Gow, V., Brown, L., Johnston, C., Neale, A., Paynter, G., & Rigby, F. (2009). Making New Zealand Content Easier to Find, Share and Use. In Museums and the Web 2009. Presented at the Museums and the Web 2009, Toronto: Archives & Museum Informatics, Retrieved from http://www.archimuse.com/mw2009/papers/gow/gow.html
Joanne S

Standards and legislation - National Archives of Australia - 0 views

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    NAA's guide to Legislation that affects how your agency manages its records NAA summarises key legislation affecting recordkeeping practices
Joanne S

Social Media: Libraries Are Posting, but Is Anyone Listening? - 0 views

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    "We keep it fun. I tell my staff that they should follow a very simple rule, don't post anything you wouldn't be comfortable saying at a service desk. Beyond that they are using their voice, following their passions, and engaging with our community," commented Brown."
Joanne S

Guideline 16 - Accountable outsourcing: Recordkeeping considerations of outsourcing NSW... - 0 views

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    In light of the lecture on Accountability the following quote in the Guideline is important... "Public offices are accountable Outsourcing a business activity does not diminish a public office's responsibility to ensure that it is carried out properly and that all requirements for records are met".
Joanne S

Recordkeeping Policies and Standards | SRO - 0 views

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    Scroll down to access the above Standard.
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