Creating a Social Media Policy | Idealware - 1 views
-
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.
-
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.
5 annotated resources about social media - 6 views
How to Create Social Media Guidelines for Your School | Edutopia - 0 views
-
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.
Staff use of social media in Sydney Catholic Schools - 0 views
-
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.
Media Culture Society-2013-van Dijck-199-215.pdf - 0 views
-
Abstract: Social media are popular stages for self-expression, communication and self-promotion. Rather than facilitating online identity formation, they are sites of struggle between users, employers and platform owners to control online identities - a struggle played out at the level of the interface. This article offers a comparative interface analysis between Facebook and LinkedIn. While Facebook is particularly focused on facilitating personal self-presentation, LinkedIn's interface caters towards the need for professional self-promotion. And yet, both platforms deploy similar principles of connectivity and narrative - strategies that can be succinctly revealed in recent interface changes. These changing digital architectures form the necessary backdrop for asking critical questions about online self-presentation: How are public identities shaped through platform interfaces? How do these features enable and constrain the sculpting of personal and professional persona? And what are the consequences of imposed connectivity and narrative uniformity on people's online identities?
New York City Department of Education Social Media Guidelines - 0 views
-
Although this policy relates to American schools, it recognises that the same principles used for employee social media use in Australia are relevant everywhere. The policy includes a lot of the same information as the Australian examples, however, ends with a detailed Frequently Asked Questions section that would be extremely useful to employees seeking clarification in regards to general, personal and student social media use.
Is Facebook now going to faceoff with Google? - 0 views
-
Is Zuckerberg right when he says "the vast amount of information that users share within Facebook could eventually replace the need to search the web for answers to certain questions"? I don't share very much..it doesn't come naturally (on line that is). But this share here is my 1st Diigo post! Following on from my 1st tweet earlier.....Thank god I've got yoga tonight to bring myself back to the real world.
Long term effects of the use of Social Media - 9 views
A breath of common sense on this is Richard Glover's Good weekend article: http://www.smh.com.au/comment/why-baroness-susan-greenfield-thinks-twitter-is-the-end-of-the-world-20141111-11k9v0.html U...
Librarians prevalent in use of social media - Analysis & News - Research Information - 1 views
Letters to a Young Librarian: To Facebook or Not To Facebook, That Is The Question - 1 views
Facebook Was The One Network People Used Less In 2014 - 7 views
-
There's no question that Facebook is the world's biggest social network and will probably continue to be for some time. But the way we use Facebook is changing: gradually, it's becoming a far more passive hub for our online social interactions.
-
interesting to see that snapchat is now the most used. I can remember when it was myspace... trending platforms.
Twitter for Libraries (and Librarians) - 0 views
-
he essence of Twitter is conversation. Libraries, however, tend to use it as a broadcast mechanism. Libraries on Twitter should encourage followers to interact with the library—ask questions, share links, re-Tweet interesting posts from others, and reply when people message you (those are prefaced with @ your account name). For professional development, look for conference coverage on Twitter. Given the many potential uses of Twitter for libraries—not to mention the likelihood that your patrons are already on it—it’s a great medium to embrace. And at just a few sentences a day, the lightweight format doesn’t require much time to make a big impact. The accounts above will give you a feel for library Twittering (for more libraries that Twitter, check out www.libsuccess.org/index.php?title=Twitter).
Mod 6.3 Social Media policy in Secondary Schools and Libraries:5 examples #1 - 1 views
Anderson, S, Edutopia. (n.d.). How to create social media guidelines for your school. Retrieved from https://backend.edutopia.org/sites/default/files/pdfs/edutopia-anderson-social-media-guidelines....
1 - 14 of 14
Showing 20▼ items per page