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Vanessa

Social Media in Higher Education | Rey Junco's Blog - 0 views

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    Reynol Junco is a faculty member/researcher who focuses on social media. This is his blog. 
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    I was lucky enough to Skype with Rey Junco last December after I e-mailed him about an article of his I love. Very friendly!
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    Good on you for just contacting him! I've yet to meet him, but have (obv.) read his work.
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    Cool Blog! Thanks for sharing. I wonder why the above link says to his blog says 0 views, I clicked on it and went to the site, so that should be at least one view! I am also assuming Abigail clicked on the link too, although she may be already ready following the blog since she already a fan of him!
Vanessa

Social Media, Service, and the Perils of Scholarly Affect - Hybrid Pedagogy - 3 views

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    Tagging because I want to read it, but thought some of you might be interested as well.
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    Interesting piece. I've heard lots about the debate over scholarship versus service, and thought that Bessette's analogy to blogging as service was fascinating. Knowledge sharing may not be scholarship in the traditional sense, but it certainly plays an important role in pushing higher education forward, so maybe it should be considered a real part of a scholar's contributions to the field.
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    I know some bloggers who are actively lobbying to consider their blogs as scholarship. Some have submitted archives as part of promotion dossiers. Generally, they're not at R1 universities -- although there are plenty of R1 scholars who see how blogging and other social media interactions can enhance their scholarship via promoting their work and building their networks. And many have also talked about the effect it has had on their writing. I think I'll blog about that sometime in the next week.
Ömer Arslan

The Straightforward Guide to Twitter Analytics - 6 views

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    Interested in Twitter Analytics? Take a look at this blog post that may help you gain initial impressions.
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    Here are two more resources for you to uncover Twitter Analytics. 1. https://www.brandwatch.com/blog/twitter-analytics-tools/ and 2. https://buffer.com/library/twitter-analytics/. I hope these resources help! :)
Vanessa

Massive Open Online Courses: Setting Up (StartToMOOC, Part 1) by Inge de Waard : Learni... - 2 views

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    First in a series on setting up your own MOOC (or any other course, really) using google and related tools.
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    This article is fantastic. I like how the author is acknowledging that creating a MOOC will seem daunting to newbies, but her detailedness calmed my fears of doing something like that. As I explored the article and its links, I switched from being overwhelmed at the thought of creating one to having a flood of ideas on what I could do in such an environment. What a transitition!
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    I think the articles are great, I looked at a few of the parts. Nice descriptions and screenshots. I haven't asked this before, and maybe I should know this but what are the RSS feeds? I have ignored them because I didn't know what they were. Since part 2 tells me how to add them to my site, I wonder what they are.
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    Thank you very much for sharing this, Vanessa, I'm going to try it, it seems like a great platform to use. Fran, basically if you want to follow a blog or a website and don't want to check every day if there's something new published, you add this blog/website to a feed reader (I use Google Reader) and see all the new posts of the different blogs and websites published on the same page. This is (more or less) a RSS feed. Such a great help for managing information!
Michelle Cates

Best 50 Leadership Blog Sites in 2015 | ReadyToManage - 2 views

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    Great resource for the classes we teach in the Undergraduate Leadership Certificate!
Alyn Minnerly

50 Great Widgets For Your Blog - 2 views

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    This site offers some fun widgets for your website/blog. Its so easy to use, just customize, cut and paste the code and you're done. I added the weather and my tweets to my class blog.
Vanessa

Introduce a new way to retain knowledge from Kindle books | Diigo - 1 views

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    On this is going to be a game changer for me! Not exactly social media, but ... Ty clipped from the Diigo blog, which led me there, and then I found this entry. I can import my highlighted passages from Kindle reading to Diigo? SOLD! I've felt limited by kindle reading/highlighting because then my notes are still stuck on the kindle. But with this integration ... oh my, the possibilities!
Ömer Arslan

Using Twitter as a data source an overview of social media research tools (2021) | Impa... - 5 views

  • Fast-forward to 2021, and something big has happened within the social media research space. Twitter has released a new product track, the ‘academic research product track’. This allows academic researchers free access to the complete archive of historical public tweets (by historical data we mean tweets posted in the past). This is significant news because for many researchers without a large budget or with limited time, historical data has until now been out of reach.
    • Ömer Arslan
       
      This is interesting! It can be difficult to access to tweets more than a week even through paid services. I want to explore this and see how it works.
  • Twitter Archiving Google Spreadsheet (TAGS)Web-basedTwitterFree
    • Ömer Arslan
       
      TAGS can be one of the helpful tools when collecting some Twitter data!
  • GephiWindows, Mac OS, and LinuxImport data from other platformsFree
    • Ömer Arslan
       
      Gephi is another cool tool that may help with importing network data and visualizing the network. Statistics panel might also be helpful to identify some of the network metrics.
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  • SociovizWeb-basedTwitterLimited Free
    • Ömer Arslan
       
      Sociovis can also be helpful when starting with some Twitter data.
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    This blog post introduces tools for social media analytics (particularly Twitter). Some of them may support cross platform analysis (not just Twitter). Have you played with any of them before? I've explored TAGS and Socioviz just a little bit.
Ömer Arslan

Ethical dilemmas on social media: Swedish secondary teachers' boundary management on Fa... - 6 views

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    This study examines student-teacher interaction on Facebook and how teachers manage ethical concerns arising from pupils' actions and their appearance on Facebook.
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    https://www-tandfonline-com.proxy.lib.fsu.edu/doi/full/10.1080/10508422.2018.1516148?src=recsys This article is also about ethical issues, but deals with the field of psychotherapy (and doctoral students in clincical psychology - the education link.
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    Thank you for sharing that article! It is really interesting and similar to the concerns addressed in the first article. I just do not understand the default assumption and position that self-disclosure in online spaces will damage the interaction between the stakeholders. In the end, they (e.g., student-teacher, doctor-patient) both perform what they are expected to perform in a work-related context. Self-disclosing individual aspects should not discredit one's expertise, credibility, etc. I am curious about your perspectives. :-)
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    Thank you for the reply! What struck me as valid about the article is that for some relationships, there is no self-disclosure on one side, and maximun self-disclosure on the other. The article talked about psychotherapists. Typically, the individual in therapy knows nothing or very little about the therapist, while the therapist gets to know the person in theapy quite well - one supposes. While I personally would like to know something about the "personness" of a therapist, prevailing opinion is that, should the person in therapy gain knowledge of the therapist through social media, it would damage the theraputic relationship. Same thing with doctors. Perhaps the same thing with priests. I'm a bit paranoid about too much self-disclosure, except for the ADHD thing, so if I where a therapist, I would be OK. However, if I blogged on my struggles with Therapy School, thoughts about patients, etc... I would be more worried. Actually,blogging about patients might cause you to lose your license... and it should! I know all this because my husband is a psychologist. It's almost impossible to have a conversation about his work without violating some ethical code or another. :-)
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    I think I agree with you in the idea that in some relationships there is no mutual disclosure because we expect and accept a level of certain patterns of behavior or let's say self-disclosure. As you have mentioned, while we do not anticipate a therapist to self-disclose 'personal' aspects, the same goes with the person. S/he is expected to self-disclose. I am not familiar with the therapist/person interaction, but I can make connections from my personal experiences. They both have 'preferred, expected' rights and duties in relation to each other. While a therapist may be legitimate to know whether the person is ADHD or not or whatsoever, it sounds reasonable. However, when it comes to the person whether the therapist is an ADHD or whatsoever, wait! A therapist and ADHD??? No way. I wish I read about an expert's perspectives in a blog form that may potentially heal my wounds or others. But at the same time, it is not easy to establish. One of the tensions that I need to resolve, in the end. I am glad that you shared your experiences. Such a nurturing conversation. :-)
Alyn Minnerly

Pipes: Rewire the web - 1 views

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    We are introducing a new module, the XPATH Fetch Page. We are also going to deprecate the Fetch Page module at the end of June. So please convert your existing Pipes that use the Fetch Page module to the XPATH Fetch Page module...more In this talk from YUIConf 2011, we demonstrate the features of the Yahoo!
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    This was recommended by the professor at the beginning of this week. I tried it out. I think it has a lot of good uses. It has a bit of a learning curve as I had trouble getting to work the filters. However, I think once I master this, it could be a very good tool for social interaction perhaps in a community of practice, on a blog. I have one on my blog, it was meant to only filter articles about global warming and going green, but didn't work just yet.
yidke6463

Can Students Get Better Grades Using Social Media? — Plagiarism Checker | WriteCh... - 1 views

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    This blog makes the statement that social media helps students relate their life to their school work via social media... making school work more "active."
nutraware79

Blog about Diigo - 8 views

https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/4853460019275682711/2309257379340660733?hl=en

social internet learning

started by nutraware79 on 05 Jun 21 no follow-up yet
mooper

Google Analytics for Blogs - 6 views

Blog that teaches people how to add analytics to blogger.

analytics Web Internet

Vanessa

George Veletsianos | A place to log ideas and thoughts - 1 views

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    George Veletsianos is a faculty member/researcher whose work focuses on online learning, including social media. Perhaps worth a follow.
trueseminole05

Five Reasons Why Pokémon Go Will Change Education, and One Reason Why It Won'... - 2 views

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    Five reasons why Pokémon Go is the future of education... 1. It's popular. 2. It's fun. 3. It's on phones and kids like their phones, so education of the future will have to be on phones. 4.
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    "Augmented reality, which is better than reality" - made me laugh! This was an interesting take on Pokemon Go, and I appreciate that he said that we as educators shouldn't focus on the technology of it, but what it unlocks in the person using it. Thanks for sharing!
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    This quote stuck out to me "Education doesn't happen to students, but inside them. I can't remember where I heard that, but it's true." So VERY true! It's an internal process. Very cool article.
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