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chris_kordas

Social Media Policies in Libraries - 11 views

Vanwynsberghe, H., Boudry, E., Vanderlinde, R., & Verdegem, P. (2014). Experts as facilitators for the implementation of social media in the library? A social network approach. Library Hi Tech, 32(...

social media INF206 Social Media Policies Social Networking Policies

started by chris_kordas on 19 Jan 16 no follow-up yet
rohueston

5 annotated resources about social media - 6 views

American Library Association. (2015). Questions and Answers on Ethics and Social Media Retrieved from http://www.ala.org/advocacy/proethics/questions-and-answers-ethics-and-social-media The America...

started by rohueston on 31 Jan 15 no follow-up yet
Lucy A liked it
Heather Bailie

Lisa Nielsen: The Innovative Educator: Conversation topics for educators in the age of ... - 2 views

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    Lisa Nielsen promotes the effective use of social media in education and is concerned that teachers do not fully understand their potential, nor best practice. She recommends conversation as an excellent way of supporting teachers in having a go. She provides two lists of conversation starters worthy of discussion in relation to particular contexts. While not promoting them as "Do and Don't" she has, however, divided them into Recommended, and Think twice before... Topics include: best practice for interacting with students; managing your online identity; role and responsibilities of parents, and managing online spaces. The lists provide an excellent basis for the development of a social media policy for schools.
jacquiknox

Five Social Media Policy Development and Revision Resources - 7 views

My workplace context is an Academic Library where I worked as a Library Information Officer (Library Technician). The articles and Social Media Policies I have selected are relevant to Academic Lib...

Social Media INF206 library

started by jacquiknox on 16 May 16 no follow-up yet
colleenbranford

https://www.det.nsw.edu.au/policies/technology/communication/socmed_guide.pdf - 1 views

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    This document from New South Wales Education & Training provides social media guidelines for the department's employees. The value of social media is noted and employees are made aware of what is required for responsible use of social media for personal and professional use. While this is not a library policy, aspects could be adapted for library use. The guidelines are clearly summarised in large font on a single page and then followed up with more detail.
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    This document in produced by the Department of Education and Training (DET) in 2011. It provides a set of guidelines for staff DET use of social media. Useful in the educational context.
Karen Malbon

Social Media, Social Networking and School Libraries. - 1 views

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    This slideshare by Judy O'Connell encourages teacher librarians to become competent social media users. The twenty first century learning environment is constantly changing and teacher librarians must adapt. The internet is now a participatory medium and social networks are integral in our lives. School libraries need to be involved in social media and it begins with teacher librarians being active users within their with personal learning networks and their personal lives. Judy provides advice for teacher librarians on how to get started with policy planning, examples of best practice, tools and strategies for implementation. Specific instructions are provided for using Facebook and Twitter in school libraries.
Judy O'Connell

Content Curation Guide by Robin Good - from a business perpective - 2 views

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    "If you are interested in understanding what content curation is all about and where's its key value, you will find this material relevant to your learning goal. In this reading collection you can see how curation can be a fantastic instrument for learning, journalism and marketing, as it provides the means to create value, to find unique resources and to illustrate them, and in this process it showcases your competence and expertise on the matter (or the one of your company / organization). "
anonymous

The Age of Distraction: Getting Students to Put Away Their Phones and Focus on Learning... - 1 views

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    In a September 2012 post I briefly highlighted a number of studies documenting that most students don't multi-task well. When they're texting, looking at Facebook, or cruising on the Internet and listening to a lecture or discussion and trying to take notes, they aren't dealing with the content as well as they would be if they just focused on listening and note taking. And the evidence of that keeps accumulating, like the Kuznekoff and Titsworth study referenced here and described in detail in the January issue of The Teaching Professor. Using an intriguing study design, here's what they found: ". . . students who use their mobile phones during class lectures tend to write down less information, recall less information, and perform worse on a multiple-choice test than those students who abstain from using their mobile phones during class." (p. 251).
Heather Bailie

How to Create Social Media Guidelines for Your School | Edutopia - 0 views

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    In this concise four page guide (produced by Edutopia in collaboration with Facebook) educator and author Steven Anderson (@web20classroom) provides a very practical, step-by-step guide to developing a school social media policy. The seven steps start with "Examine your school culture" and conclude with "Review periodically". Each step includes reflection questions (for example "What are the fears around social media in school?" and "Does everyone on the team share the same goal?") and/or links to further resources as appropriate.
marianne206

The Technium: Ethnic Technology - 3 views

  • It is almost as if technology had an ethnic dimension.
    • chareb11
       
      not sure that we can talk of ethnicity in today's world of globalisation - maybe culture is better and more politically correct
  • Anthropologist Pierre Petrequin once noted that the Meervlakte Dubele
    • chareb11
       
      wonder where the reference is as I could not find the name of this tribe on the Internet!
    • marianne206
       
      I think it id hidden in this book somewhere https://www.gutenberg.org/files/20167/20167-h/20167-h.htm
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    Remarks that technology is adoped based what they do for us and their meaning to us. compared between US and Japan's use of car v.s mobile.
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    Article about how technology is/has been adopted in different times. Not poitically correct in my opinion
Renate Beilharz

Creating a Social Media Policy | Idealware - 1 views

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    Nonprofit social media policy workbook http://idealware.org/articles/creating-social-media-policy This practical workbook created for Idealware in 2012, is designed to take an organisation through the process of actually writing a social media policy. The worksheets guide the discussion by asking the important questions about social media that need to be addressed in an effective policy. The workbook relevant to all types of nonprofit organisations, including public libraries. A companion document Social media policy templates provides sample policy statements to assist with the actual formulation of policy text.
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    It's fabulous that resources like this exist and the organisations will share them. In a age of tight work time frames and even tighter budgets, it's helpful to not have to reinvent the wheel when your organisation has to take this step. It also means that more libraries are able to make policies and guidelines because they don't have to start from scratch. This has benefits for everyone - management - staff and clients.
Renate Beilharz

Emerald Insight | Library Management | Social technologies in public libraries: explori... - 0 views

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    Smeaton, K. & Davis, K. (2014). Social technologies in public libraries: exploring best practice. Library management. 35(3), 224-238. Retrieved from www.emeraldinsight.com/journals.htm?articleid=17107477 A report of a research project that explored social media best practice in the public library sector using two Australian public libraries. Five themes were extracted from the interview: creating communities, connecting with users, inviting participation, organisational culture and staffing. Only one library had a a social media policy, though this had been developed at the local council level.
anonymous

Learn It In 5 - Digital Classroom Strategies - 1 views

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    Learn how to use any web 2.0 technology in the classroom in 5 minutes or less.
Georgena Bowmer

Facebook again dropping in popularity among teenagers, study indicates - 4 views

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    No. 1 social networking site Facebook must do something to appeal more towards teenagers, as the site again dropped in popularity among users 13 to 17 years old, according to a survey conducted by Frank N. Magid Associates. Facebook usage among teenagers dropped from 95 percent in 2012 down to 94 percent in 2013, and further declined in 2014 to 88 percent.
anonymous

Learn It In 5 - What is Web 2.0? - 1 views

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    Learn how to use any web 2.0 technology in the classroom in 5 minutes or less.
Heather Bailie

Staff use of social media in Sydney Catholic Schools - 0 views

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    An example of an actual policy, this is clearly written, in accessible language, and there is support for the use of online communities with students for educational purposes if the explicit procedures and expectations are followed. The policy for the personal use of social media clearly outlines what is and is not acceptable and there is excellent practical advice for teachers to consider in order to maintain professional standards. My only question is has this been reviewed? It is dated February 2011 with a review date of March 2012 but this is the only version available (from CEO Sydney website) as of January 2015.
marianne206

Academic Referencing Tool, Charles Sturt University - 0 views

shared by marianne206 on 20 Dec 17 - No Cached
  • Author, A. A. (Year). Title of chapter or entry. In A. Editor & B. Editor (Eds.), Title of book  (Xed., pp. xxx-xxx). Location: Publisher. Ryan, M. J. (2005). Evolution of behaviour. In J. Bolhuis & L. Giraldeau (Eds.), The behaviour of animals (pp. 294-314). Oxford, England: Blackwell. Higgs, J., McAllister, L., & Sefton, A. (2012). Communication in the health sciences. In J. Higgs, R. Ajjawi, L. McAllister, F. Trede, & S. Loftus (Eds.), Communicating in the health sciences (3rd ed., pp. 4-14). Melbourne: Australia: Oxford University Press.
    • marianne206
       
      This is what drives me nuts about referencing: the examples aren't the same, so which one is it: Melbourne: Australia or Melbourne, Australia?
sharmainedelgado

http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/access/white-paper-social-media.pdf - 19 views

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    Abstract: "Social media is now widely used by librarians to fulfill a variety of objectives. Taylor & Francis has collated a range of opinion and data within this white paper to provide an overview of how social media is currently used by librarians, for what purposes, and to what effect. Our research program comprised focus groups in the UK, USA and India."
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    Why study social media in the library? Social media has the potential to facilitate much closer relationships between libraries and their patrons - wherever users are based, and however they choose to learn about and access library services and resources. Current usage of social media by the library community generally remains ad hoc and somewhat experimental, but the uptake of these tools is accelerating, and they will likely play an increasingly important role in library service provision and outreach in the future. This white paper has been researched and compiled by Taylor & Francis to provide an overview of current practices relating to the use by libraries of social media, from a world-wide perspective, against which individual institutions can benchmark their own activities and be inspired to try new approaches. This white paper is just a start - we plan to build from this a central web-based resource on social media for the library community that will provide ongoing updates, in-depth case studies and best practice guides. We hope this will become a valuable, developing resource that librarians will access and contribute to, so the entire community benefits from sharing ideas and experiences.
Adrienne Gillingham

Examining social media policies in libraries - 18 views

Thanks for sharing dan_giles, I enjoyed reading your Blog post.

social media INF506

Janie Davies

Four Pedagogical Approaches in Helping Students Learn Information Literacy Skills - 2 views

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    In spring 2012, Rider University librarians heightened their collaboration with classroom faculty to teach students in core writing classes information literacy (IL) skills during IL instruction (ILI) sessions. This quasi-experimental study assessed four pedagogical approaches for single or multi-session ILI. The conventional approach, which involves lectures, demonstrations, and hands-on time, was used in both the control and the experimental groups.
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