Monday, November 23, 2009

Method #8--Social Networking

I have chosen not to set up a FaceBook or MySpace account at this time.  I am concerned about privacy issues, especially after reading that FaceBook and other social networking sites keep user profiles virtually forever!  Moreover, I really can't decide how badly I want to reconnect with people from all points in my past, which seems to me to be at least one main reason to have a FaceBook page. Does that make me the most anti-social person ever?  I realize most people also use it to put personal information out to current friends and colleagues.  Again, I just can't get excited about that.  However, the idea of a professional account or a library account on FaceBook or Twitter, sounds much more appealing.  I like the idea of putting out information, PR notices, and new book blurbs on social networking sites.  From the articles I read, it seems this is mainly happening at academic and public libraries, although I'm sure there are K-12 librarians using these tools also.  However, it definitely is not happening in my school district.  Just last week we received notice that the district tech dept. was opening up YouTube to teachers and staff only, for the first time ever.  FaceBook, MySpace, and Twitter are all still blocked for the time being.  I have hope that that will not always be the case, but for now, setting up an account for my library would mean doing everything from home.  I'm not willing to commit myself to that kind of  "homework."
       Should the day ever come that social networking sites are opened up at my high school, I have to wonder if it would really serve any purpose.  It seems to me that high school students would be much more reticent about joining a library group or friending a librarian or teacher than older students and adults would be.  It should be fun to find out though, if I ever get the chance!

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

New video embedded

Since my other video was removed, I've found another video to embed in this blog post




It's a pretty strange rap, but serves the purpose.  I'm really sad my other video didn't stay.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

YouTube update

Just a quick post to say that the video from YouTube that I embedded on this blog a few days ago has been taken off.  Apparently it was not a legal one to use.  I'll have to find something else, and figure out what is OK to use in my stuff and what is not.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Method #7--Social Bookmarking

I heard about Delicious a couple of years ago at some workshop. I even set up a Delicious account at that time.  And there ended my Delicious experience.  I never did a thing with it.  Yesterday, I got into my account and uploaded my favorites.  I still haven't tagged them or organized them in any way.  My curiosity is piqued with the idea of creating a library account, adding bookmarks to wonderful research sites, checking what sites other libraries are using, and sharing sites with colleagues and students.  I'm afraid I don't completely understand how to do all of this, and I'm not convinced the students in my high school would ever really use it.  I might be surprised.  Right now, it sounds like one more thing that would take quite a bit of time to set up in any way that would prove useful and appealing to high school students.  I am intrigued, though, and will definitely find time to play with the site after I've processed the 200 new books I have sitting in my workroom and office!  Yes, they are the old-fashioned paper kind.  I will have to relisten to the tutorial, reread the article and watch the Delicious intro again at that time, no doubt.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Method #6--YouTube continued

I've tried for a couple of days now to watch the Wesch video--the anthropological intro to YouTube. Just can't seem to get enough bandwidth to watch it straight through.  But I think I've watched enough to get the drift--that YouTube has created this whole new way for people to create community, something we all yearn for, whether we know it or not.  The question is, "Can we really create community with an unknown group of people, no matter how large the group may be?"  Doesn't this redefine community significantly?  There's no doubt that it's possible to engage in some sort of relationship with people you don't know and really don't even talk to, but that's not community. It seems a little sad to me that huge numbers of people so long for connection with others that they will make comments on just about anything--blogs of every subject, videos of the stupidest sort, photographs--when often there is no reciprocity at all.  As a person of faith in which community is an integral part, I have thought about this "respond to everything online" mentality in a couple of ways.  Perhaps this is not the venue for sharing those thoughts, but at the very least, I have to say that I find it hard to believe that there can be community in any real or meaningful or lasting way around a video on YouTube.

        With that said, I do understand that You Tube can be fun.  If a person wants to spend his free time uploading a video of himself doing something silly, or informational, or even boring, who's to say that that is not just as entertaining a hobby as stamp collecting and knitting.  Moreover, just as I commented in the blog on Flickr, the sharing of all these videos provides such an incredible wealth of material that can be used in the classroom or library, that we as educators would be really foolish to ignore completely the value of this resource.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Method #6--Video

I have certainly watched a number of videos on You Tube.  And for at least two years I've heard about the many brave and gifted librarians in Texas who are creating their own book trailers and posting them on Teacher Tube.  It is a goal of mine to attempt to create one of my own.  This is definitely another area of insecurity for me.  Knowing about and doing myself are two entirely different things.  I will try to download my favorite You Tube video. At least this is the one I've watched the most often.  Not education or library related, but defintiely an "upper."





Enjoy!

Thursday, November 5, 2009

More on RSS

I really am enjoying my Google Reader.  I just added a new subscription today to the School Library Journal newsletter.  I may never be able to keep up with all this reading, but at least it's all in one place so I can try!  A really great tool.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Method #5--Flickr, etc.

Yet again I am surprised at what is available online.  Of course, I've heard of Flickr and like sites for years.  It's the whole social networking around photos that has surprised me.  I looked at one recently posted photo which had something like 28 responses to it.  Don't these people work?  It's all I can do to keep up with my email at school.  I can't imagine spending my own free time looking at other people's pictures and making comments on them.  These virtual "friendships" make me a little crazy.  I'd rather have breakfast face to face with a friend of 30 years.  However, I'd have to be a block of wood not to see the potential of having access to thousands of public photos which might be used in a variety of ways if attribution is given.  On the most basic level, I love having an online place to save my photos and to share them with those near and dear to me.




So here's the Flickr photo I uploaded.  It's by Rona Keller who loaded it on Flickr day before yesterday.  Pretty cool.  However, I couldn't seem to upload it directly from the website.  I had to download it to my computer first.  Maybe I have to create a Flickr account first?

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Method #4 RSS feeds

I continue to be amazed at how much I don't know and how many really useful things there are on the web.  I set up a Google Reader and added 6 subscriptions, mostly from NPR, my favorite radio station.  I'll continue to play with it, and try to figure out what it means to "create my stuff."  I never did find a place that says "Discover."  Could that be the same thing as Explore?  Anyway, very cool.

More on privacy

I heard more on the privacy story on NPR this past week, confirming that it's not such a bad thing that I'm uneasy with the Internet.  The law simply hasn't kept up with the technology which allows just about anyone with the know-how to retrieve what used to be private information on people from the Internet.  If I understood what the reporter was saying, possession still tends to by nine-tenths of the law. So, if your information is on your own computer, there is some protection under the law.  But all the information stored on third-party servers is not so safe under the law.  Interestingly enough, law-makers were on the verge of passing more stringent privacy laws when 9/11 hit.  Since then, Congress has lost its will to pass the laws that would protect people's information.  I'm sure this is a vastly simplified summary of what the reality is, and even what was said on the report, but it did cause me to want to go slow with this whole idea of transferring all my information online.