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Nigel Robertson

Altmetrics in the Wild: Using Social Media to Explore Scholarly Impact - 0 views

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    In growing numbers, scholars are integrating social media tools like blogs, Twitter, and Mendeley into their professional communications. The online, public nature of these tools exposes and reifies scholarly processes once hidden and ephemeral. Metrics based on this activities could inform broader, faster measures of impact, complementing traditional citation metrics. This study explores the properties of these social media-based metrics or "altmetrics," sampling 24,331 articles published by the Public Library of Science.
Nigel Robertson

Young people and social networking services - not another moral panic | The Social Web ... - 0 views

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    "A new UK-focussed report published by Childnet International aims to support teachers and lecturers who wish to explore the use of social networking services by young people. In this guest post, Josie Fraser, the report's author, explains more."
Nigel Robertson

SocialTech: Young People and Social Networking Services - 0 views

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    "It isn't a completely introductory level document, but should be useful and informative for people who have a responsibility care towards children and young people - including governors, principals and senior management teams, Safeguarding boards and local authorities - people who are making decisions concerning educational provision and resourcing. It will also be very handy for anyone working within the sector and wanting to use internet based services with young people."
Nigel Robertson

Informal learning and identity formation in online social networks - 0 views

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    "All students today are increasingly expected to develop technological fluency, digital citizenship, and other twenty-first century competencies despite wide variability in the quality of learning opportunities schools provide. Social network sites (SNSs) available via the internet may provide promising contexts for learning to supplement school-based experiences. This qualitative study examines how high school students from low-income families in the USA use the SNS, MySpace, for identity formation and informal learning. The analysis revealed that SNSs used outside of school allowed students to formulate and explore various dimensions of their identity and demonstrate twenty-first century skills; however, students did not perceive a connection between their online activities and learning in classrooms. We discuss how learning with such technologies might be incorporated into the students overall learning ecology to reduce educational inequities and how current institutionalized approaches might shift to accommodate such change."
Nigel Robertson

Technology Tools for Reflection (Reflection for Learning) - 0 views

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    A series of tools that can be used to support reflection, with a brief discussion of the process, the advantages and disadvantages of each approach.
Nigel Robertson

Odin Lab's Storefront - Lulu.com - 0 views

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    A couple of books on Lulu about digital identity.
Nigel Robertson

Drawing a line from @elgg to @withknown: an adventure in #edtech and #indieweb - 0 views

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    Ben Werdmuller describes the rationale behind Known, his new social network option.
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