Online Social Networking
The overall goal of the School
Library Media Center is to increase circulation of books and other resource
offerings. Increasing the appeal of the
SLMC to students by utilizing social media is one step in the right direction.
K-12 students are social media savvy and would love the opportunity to access
these websites at will. Media centers must be able to respond to the needs of
its users by staying abreast of current web tool trends that engage its users.
Social networking is an influential tool and media centers should embrace the
opportunity to engage its users in a Library Media Center social networking
site. The patrons SLMC’s serve are those that are actively engaging in social
media. And if we are to garner the attention of the youth we serve, then we
must participate in the activities that interest them in order to be relevant.
Target Your Audience
Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter,
KIK, Instagram, Google Hangouts, Pinterest, and Flickr are a few of the most
popular social networking websites with which most of us are familiar. Adults
and children alike utilize one or more of these most popular social networks. Most
social networking websites strive to reach a target audience while some seek
wide mainstream appeal and others focus on attracting a niche group. Media
centers enhance the content instruction by providing additional resources and
social media tools can prove to be a current tool to aid in this endeavor. Group
collaboration and discussion is significant to the learning model in most classes
and social networking sites can facilitate such encounters for students. One
such example is the educational counterpart to Facebook called Edmodo. This is
a tool that allows teachers to create a page and students are invited to join
by creating a profile and teachers can post documents, links, audio/video,
information to the site for students. Surveys, discussions, quizzes, and tests
can be arranged via Edmodo. I have found
Edmodo to be the most efficient tool I have used this school year. I post
assignments, initiate discussion, give quizzes/tests, engage parents, and share
and learn from other content area teachers.
Social Networking with OPAC
Social networking sites have
been integrated into library automation systems. These systems provide “user
tagging, user comments, reviews, ratings, added subjects and keywords, and
other information to provide peer input to library collections, as well as many
other user-centered applications”. As we
approach this topic with an open mind we will find that offering patrons the
most current means of information gathering is the right step in the digital
direction in which we all should be heading. Most schools are slowly getting on
board with the digital trends. My school has blocked access to all the popular
social networks- although students find ways around the filters. I support the
filtering of the social networks for personal networking purposes. We have
access to Edmodo and most teachers have replaced webpages for Edmodo.
Media specialists must be
engaged in what’s going on in our digital society in order to be current and
make our media centers relevant. We must participate in educational social
networks to assist with hosting social media for the students we serve.
According to Library 2.0 and Beyond: Innovative
Technologies and Tomorrow’s Users, there are six steps to follow to help
guide your library’s entrance into the social networking environment.
Step 1: Explore-
Create a personal account and explore the capabilities of the website.
Step 2: Set the Ground Rules- Decide who will
maintain the SLMC’s presence on the social networking site.
Step 3: Add Content- Emphasize celebrating the
media center.
Step 4: Advertise- Identify and invite potential
patrons into your networking community.
Step 5: Update
Regularly- As your community grows, continue to provide new content.
Step 6: Have Fun with It! The social networking
experience is what you make it. Show the personality of your media center and
encourage conversation with patrons.
Notable Educational
Social Networking Websites
Edmodo.com
Moodle.org
Twiducate.com
Diipo.com
Notable OPAC
Social Networking Website links
References:
Courtney, N. (2007). Library 2.0 and beyond.
Westport, Connecticut: Libraries Unlimited.
Seven
things you should know about wikis. (2005, July). Retrieved from http://net.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ELI7004.pdf
Fiehn, B. (2008, September
01). Social networking and your library
OPAC. Retrieved from http://www.mmischools.com/Articles/ReadArticle.aspx?ArticleID=59618
Valenza,
J. (2014, March 03). Teacherlibrarianning. Retrieved from http://teacherlibrarian.ning.com/
There are great points here-especially tying social networking with OPAC. This is information that will help encourage media specialist to utilize social media. Also, I liked that you connected 21st century learning such as group collaboration with social networking.
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