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Lorri Mon

'Embedded Librarian' on Twitter Served as Information Concierge for Class - Wired Campu... - 0 views

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    Librarian monitors Twitter during class session and suggests resources, provides links
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    -Librarian as monitor and librarian as embedded resource *librarian monitors classroom discussion in real time, and suggests links/resources as necessary *allows students to get another layer of information besides real-time classroom discussion *augmented reality, library-style? Information layers over what is occurring in real-time *librarian is not participating, but instead providing additional info as conversations and discussions present themselves *allows at least one person to dig deeper, and give more in-depth examination to questions/ideas posed *embed librarians into conversations from afar (book discussions, etc?) and augment what is discussed
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    If conversations happen over SMNs, a librarian can chime in with stats, info, and relevant links *how to avoid being creepy or stalkerish?
Lorri Mon

Who does all the text messaging? Young adults by far. - 0 views

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    Women text more than men; Black and Hispanic people text more than whites; lower income households text the most; those with less than high school education text more
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    -73% of adults text at least at some time. Young adults text the most. Black and Hispanic persons text and call more often than whites. *texting is a simple form of communication, embraced more readily by people of lower socio-economic status/minority status... *but why? The prevalence of pay-as-you-go plans which include all forms of communication with purchase? Younger people/lower-income w/ bad credit/minorities are more likely to use these *using SMS to conduct reference/chat/info seeking habits of YAs
Lorri Mon

Lee Rainie Broadband adoption | Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project ... - 1 views

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    Nov 15, 2010 from slides: 93% of teens 12-17 are using Internet, 79% of adults 18 and over. 66% of homes have broadband; 70% of urban & suburban homes, but only 50% of rural homes. 2/3 of online adults and 3/4 of online teens are content creators. 50% of adults customize digital info flows (RSS feeds, etc.) Less likely to have broadband: high school education or less, senior citizen, rural resident, disabled, Arican-american. 85% of adults own cell phones. 2/3 of adults and 3/4 of teens use the cloud. 34% of Americans used Internet on a cell. 21% of American adults are not online. 1/3 of Americans used library computers in 2009: 40% seeking jobs/careers, 42% used it for education (homework, classes, degree prep) and 37% for health/wellness research on disease, diet, nutrition, doctors. "Those with a chronic disease are especially likely to reach out for support online." "Social media bridges generational gaps and provides a shared space for interaction."
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    *does use of Broadband correlate to use of social networks? (i.e. type and frequency?) *w/ the advent of wide-spread broadband availability, the consumers become the creators *as people can access anytime and anywhere, how does the library remain relevant in the online world? How to be sure the wide variety of library's population is represented in the online experience? *diverse networks more segmented and layered *social media can bridge generation gaps between seniors and younger users
Lorri Mon

Mary Madden & Kathryn Zickuhr, "65% of online adults use social networking sites," PEW ... - 1 views

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    Phone interviews in May 2011 with 2,277 adult internet users ages 18 and older p.2 65% of online adults use social networking sites; p3 Of young adult women ages 18-29 who are online, 89% use social networking sites, 69% on an average day. Highest usage skews toward female and younger, but no significant differences in usage by race, household income, geography and education level.
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    -in 2005, 8% of adults used SNSs, now the figure is at 65% -most users rate their SNS experiences as positive *great from a social capital standpoint, as they are more likely to keep accounts active, and pursue weak links in newsfeed -"Young adult women ages 18-29 are the power users of social networking", 89% have accts and 69% access them daily *target young adult women with ads on FB, maybe? use GIS data to appeal to interests of that group, and explain what the library can do for them -more adults are using social networks (driving the avg age of the user up considerably from the imagined age) -"As of May 2011, over eight in ten internet users ages 18-29 use social networking sites (83%), compared with seven in ten 30-49 year-olds (70%), half of 50-64 year-olds (51%), and a third of those age 65 and older (33%)." Positive Negative Neutral Notable (top ten) (top ten) (top ten) (mentioned only once) Good Boring Okay Nosey Fun Confusing Fine Omnipresent Great Frustrating Adequate Hog Wash Interesting Time-consuming Family Glitches Convenient Overwhelming Rarely Vulnerable Excellent Addictive All Right Crowded Easy Annoying Communication Stalking Awesome Addicting Seldom Influence Informative Mediocre Facebook Conformity Useful Overrated Infrequent Befuddled *how to work on changing those negative and neutral to positive associations... how to work the library in as a positive association? Infrequent users can be prompted via opt-in participation to log on and complete activities, post. Process needs to be secure, and easy to use for those who are frustrated with the SNS, etc. Address these concerns and you can generate stron
Lorri Mon

As learning goes mobile (slides and video) | Pew Research Center's Internet & American ... - 2 views

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    Lee Rainie of Pew Internet & American Life Project Oct 20 2011
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    -mobile connectivity changes the way people interact with media, and how they learn -Internet adoption at home is at 78%, broadband at 62% -65% of Internet users utilize social media -as the speed of learning changes, social networks become more relevant in people's everyday lives -35% of adults own smartphones, which means they take the web/social networks with them (51% of Millenials own smartphones) *social networks are accessible anywhere, anytime -40% of adults use the smartphone as a primary internet connector
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    -texting is popular among younger users *how to sent/relate to users who text primarily? Tweets to phone? -the rise of smartphones means more access points for info *people can look for whatever they want, whenever they want... more real-time info access -"augmented reality" "a merger of real world and data" *layers of information arranged per need *networked connections are more established because of constant availability of network (via smartphone) *libraries can be a weak connection, there for information purposes? *an app/a networked friend/a connection! -small screen leads to "info-snacking" -mobile screens leads to more alone time together, a blurring of private and public spaces -people are more confident in searching (even to their detriment) -Old: knowledge is objective and certain (organized categorically) new: knowledge is subjective and provisional (organized organically) (learning as transaction versus learning as process)
Miki Wolfe

Inbound Marketing for Social Media (Infographic) - 0 views

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    -inbound media creates dialogue *facilitated by social media, the perfect place for two-way conversations between products and consumers -inbound marketing focuses on earning a person's attention *has to be consumer oriented or directed, can't be done blindly or scattershot -earning vs pushing *finding vs seeking *marketer seeks to educate/entertain vs marketer pushes product blindly -inbound marketing uses social media and content marketing (eBooks, podcasts, blogs) -when done right, the viral potential of the marketing campaign can be substantial, which increases SEO and hits, which improves ranking *plus inbound marketing is cheaper!
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