Tired of backing up your favorites on your school computer every time the machines are re-imaged? Or worse, losing all those valuable links? Or worse still, giving up on the idea of saving valuable web links at all? Social Bookmarking is just the thing for you. If you would love to access all your bookmarks at home or school (or anywhere you get web access, which anymore is anywhere), then a social bookmarking site is the answer. There are two options I'll write about today.
Before I do so, let me preface this information with some background. I was first introduced to Social Bookmarking and thought it was silly, unneccessary, and not for me. As I did with twitter. I knew the websites I visitied and had no need to "share" them with the world. I was thinking about this all wrong. I can have websites I visit to check my bank account balance, credit card balance, etc. and not share those. But, when it comes to a professional capacity, I can share my "discoveries" and save them for later reference by using a Social Bookmarking service...for free!
Diigo is my favorite, but not my first.
Diigo V5: Collect and Highlight, Then Remember! from diigobuzz on Vimeo.
My first social bookmarking tool was Delicious, formerly del.icio.us and featured in the Common Craft video for Social Bookmarking.
You can use either Social Bookmarking tool to do the same job. Right now, I prefer Diigo, but that is also because it was predicted that Delicious was on the way out. While it is under new management and I know some people who lost their bookmarks as a result, according to Joyce V, the reports of its death were greatly exaggerated.
I also like the groups feature in Diigo and have one started but I thought I'd let you all dip your toes in before we start formally sharing...but it's coming.
Showing posts with label social bookmarking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social bookmarking. Show all posts
Friday, October 21, 2011
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Your Move, Social Bookmarking: Delicious vs/ Diigo
I have truly come full circle when it comes to social bookmarking. A few years back, I was involved in a class on technology for school librarians at Arcadia University with the fabulous and amazing recommendation writer Calvin Wang and one of the tools we became familiar with was Delicious - at that time del.icio.us. Delicious is a social bookmarking tool so you create a page where you store, tag, and share all of your bookmarks. I just didn't get it. I didn't see the need for such a site. Why would I want to share what websites I visited most frequently. Sounds stingy of me, doesn't it? I wasn't thinking why would I want to share...but at the time the websites I visited most often were ones to check my bank balance, pay and check credit cards, check my email, and other sites that I didn't feel were necessary or wise to share with the world. Now, I have a much different perspective on this exact topic. I think that before my web world was very small - I visited certain websites for teaching on a daily basis with my students but didn't branch out much because...who could keep track of all that? Well, that's the whole point! I've now changed my tune so much that when the topic of backing up bookmarks at school came up, I explained to a teacher that I don't save bookmarks on my school drive anyway - they're saved on a website (Delicious) where I can access them on any computer at school as well as at home. She replied that that made sense and it dawned on me that, perhaps, in my new role as school librarian I should share this tool with my fellow teachers. I'm sure that some are already well aware, but others may not know these tools exist or the further implications they have on teaching and our students, especially as an organizational tool. Then, my mind really started churning and I thought, what if...we had a site for our school where all teachers could contribute links and indicate via tags what grade level they were intended for and subjects, etc. Then, any teacher in the school could access those links. As it is now, teachers certainly are a sharing bunch, but they send links over email and then the person on the other end is responsible for following the link, seeing if they like it, and saving it on their own for future use. With this possibility, that would be a thing of the past and one less item to clog up already full email accounts. I'm still trying to decide if we should roll this out as a schoolwide account that any teacher can access (or an even grander scale, a district-wide set-up), or if each teacher should set up his/her own account and then form a group. My gut feeling is that a school-wide account would be the way to go to start and get people familiarized with the way this whole social bookmarking thing works. Then, as they choose, they may set up individual accounts and link back to the school-wide account. If anyone reading this has experience with this issue, please comment below or email me your suggestions.
I could also set up pathfinders on a wiki where others could contribute, but the tagg-abliity and search-ability of social bookmarking seems to make more sense to me on this front. Perhaps in a few months, I'll be on a pathfinder kick and blogging about that. Knowing me, I'll do both to some extent anyway. Because I seem to enjoy creating more work out of thin air for myself - fun, right?
Now, onto the title point. I had been first introduced to Delicious and so that is the service I utilized. I had originally set up a personal account where I stored links to parenting information, teaching information, technology information and more...it was quite a hodgepodge. When I got the position of librarian (yay!) I set up a strictly professional account to store links for library, technology, and teaching purposes only. Then I checked out Diigo on a whim and saw that it had some different and perhaps more capabilities. After a shout out to my PLN on twitter, I heard back that they do indeed do different things and both are valuable for different reasons. Delicious has a better search capability and Diigo has a better capability to set up groups. So which to choose. Then came the kicker. You don't have to choose (and you don't have to do double the uploading work, even more importantly). I think I have all the kinks worked out at this point. Since I had set up Delicious first, I exported all the bookmarks I had already saved to my computer's desktop. Then, when I created my Diigo account, I imported all the bookmarks from my desktop. Amalia Connolly on Twitter told me that Diigo can upload to Delicious so you don't have to choose. So, I went about uploading solely on Diigo planning to upload to Delicious eventually. I got around to that step today and went about things in a round-about way. I realized that I can change settings to automatically update to Delicious each time I update to Diigo, but I can't make it happen retroactively. So, everything from the time I exported from Delicious to Diigo until the present was lost in the middle. Are you still with me? So, I chose to export all my Diigo bookmarks to my desktop and import all of them back into Delicious with the additional bookmarks added in the meantime. It replaced all old bookmarks so now I have two identical lists, which may sound silly, but now that the automatic setting is in place, it will never be any more work in the future. I know that all sounded a bit complicated. So let me simplify for you. Set up an account in both Diigo AND Delicious. On Diigo, click on "tools" in the upper right hand corner then click on "more tools" on the left hand side at the bottom. Click on "Save to Delicious" and enter the user information for your Delicious account. Voila - do this FIRST and you can avoid all the importing and exporting expounded upon above. I'll make all my mistakes for you!
And, if you're wondering how someone populates a social bookmarking site with 174 links in 1 month, check out blogs in your area of interest, enter them all into an RSS reader and you'll be reading about exciting and current sites with implications for your area of interest. I'll post more about RSS and blog-reading in another post. I'll probably add the blogs I'm reading to a widget on the side bar here for ease of checking them out for any interested readers of this blog. Twitter, a micro-blogging tool, also offers the same opportunity. Check out lists of others to follow with the same interest and you'll be updated on what they're currently reading online, or in print, and what new and exciting initiatives they are implementing.
Checkmate - I win!
I could also set up pathfinders on a wiki where others could contribute, but the tagg-abliity and search-ability of social bookmarking seems to make more sense to me on this front. Perhaps in a few months, I'll be on a pathfinder kick and blogging about that. Knowing me, I'll do both to some extent anyway. Because I seem to enjoy creating more work out of thin air for myself - fun, right?
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Image courtesy of www.flickr.com/photos/jakerome |
And, if you're wondering how someone populates a social bookmarking site with 174 links in 1 month, check out blogs in your area of interest, enter them all into an RSS reader and you'll be reading about exciting and current sites with implications for your area of interest. I'll post more about RSS and blog-reading in another post. I'll probably add the blogs I'm reading to a widget on the side bar here for ease of checking them out for any interested readers of this blog. Twitter, a micro-blogging tool, also offers the same opportunity. Check out lists of others to follow with the same interest and you'll be updated on what they're currently reading online, or in print, and what new and exciting initiatives they are implementing.
Checkmate - I win!
Labels:
delicious,
diigo,
social bookmarking,
technology
Friday, July 9, 2010
Big Plans
Our school is undergoing a major construction project and I've been fortunate to witness the progress on my visits into our school's library. Fortunately the library is still air conditioned! I've been in the process of organizing and moving in my (considerable) stuff. Hopefully I've got the "right stuff" for the job. I've also been busy going through back issues of "School Library Journal" and "Library Sparks" to spark my imagination in planning for some fabulous lessons to engage students and keep the enthusiasm strong as we enter a new school year. I'm excited to welcome 4th and 5th graders into our school for the first time in my career at Pine Road, though I've taught this group way back when they were in 1st grade. I'm looking forward to my new position as a specials or "encore" teacher and the opportunity to see all the students in the school and see them grow and change throughout their six years of elementary school. Hopefully I can help to support their growth in reading and technology as well as actively integrating all the curricular areas. Like the title of this post indicates, I have big plans. I've been over to HV's public library to meet with the new interim children's librarian to work on setting up a back to school read aloud. Since I just can't wait for the first day, this will give me an opportunity to start a little early. This also opens the door for communication and collaboration between the school and public library. I've been up to visit an independent book store to possibly supplement our book fairs at school through Scholastic and I've begun to brainstorm effective ways to reach out to collaborate with teachers and encourage their input for selection of new materials for the LMC. I have ideas for classroom management in the LMC and strategies to keep things running smoothly. I have plans to incorporate more storytelling features, i.e. felt board, magnet stories, puppets, and more. Using Library Sparks' Guide to the Twitterverse, I quickly populated my twitter feeds to follow many authors and other applicable tweets. Similarly, I've utilized their webliographies to investigate suggested sites to populate my del.icio.us account. I've signed up for several of the IU and SD's workshops subsidized by a grant to learn more about technology tools that I'm not as familiar with: Moodle, Safari Montage, and others. And, as is always the case with technology, the more things change...the more they change, so I went to a workshop on a topic I thought I was fairly well versed in and learned a ton! Being out on maternity leave for one year can really leave you in the dust! More on Smart Notebook 10 to come in a future post. For each of these workshops and topics, I'll post a lil' something. Looking forward to jumping in feet first to the school library blogosphere. I'm here to make a splash!
Labels:
construction,
school library,
social bookmarking,
technology,
twitter
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