Wednesday, June 8, 2016

Facebook Pages and Twiter


Facebook is the world’s largest social network, with more than 1 billion users. It is used to keep in touch with friends, post photos, share links and exchange other information. The following comments will provide my observations I see on school library Facebook pages. I will share what they post, the advantages and disadvantages of using Facebook to promote the library as well as if any comments have been made.

After visiting several of the school libraries on Facebook, I found that they use Facebook in several different ways including: school and community photos from the past, class reunion information, senior class photos from the past, summer reading lists, summer reading programs and times available, current events taking place at school, what students are currently involved in doing at school like building new bookshelves for the library, ideas for sprucing up the library, challenged books, how a boy’s read section was put into a school library by receiving a grant, summer reading hours, when parent teacher club meetings are held, how a school library had a competition on designing a mini graphic novel, book fair times, advertising supplies needed for a makerspace station, display winners of a bookmark contest, and the list goes on.

There are many advantages of a school library using Facebook.  One, it keeps everyone up-to-date on current events taking place at school and at the library. Two, it is a way to get ideas from other school libraries to use in your own library. Three, it is a great way to keep up with friends, and four, a great way to get useful information. Facebook is one of the many tools the school library can use to achieve more communication with the community.

Some disadvantages of Facebook use in the library might be overwhelming to look at because of the extras like advertisements. Another disadvantage would be people who are not Facebook members would not get the information that is posted there and would need another way to get the information.

I found that there were not many comments on these Facebook posts. Some of the ones I saw were thanking them for posting upcoming events and just liking the post in general.
Twitter is an online social network service that enables users to send and read short messages called “tweets”. The following comments are what I found when exploring some of the educational technology leaders on Twitter:



Kathy Schrock        @kathyschrock

Kathy is an Educatioanl Technologist and Speaker. Her tweets consist of keeping us up-to-date on any computer updates that are new and any new equipment that might be worth getting for technology like TechArmor. Her updated Copywrite and Fair Use for school project posters is very useful and I really like the sketchnote presentation that was tweeted by Daena Scheuber @DScheuber of Kathy’s presentation at EduTechAU. I love sketchnoting so I thought those of you who are not familiar with sketchnoting might like to take a look, it is a  fun tool.



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Buffy Hamilton    @buffyjhamilton

Buffy is a librarian/teacher who loves critical literacy, stories, poetry and participatory learning. Buffy tweets uplifting quotes, she keep you updated on goodreads like “Sally Ride: America’s First Woman in Space” and “Lily and the Octopus”, she also keeps you up-to-date on what is going on with EasyBIb, and Buffy retweets interesting tweets that you can learn from like how brainstorming questions, not ideas, sparks creativity by Adam Strom @afstrom.



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Jim Lerman        @jimlerman

Jim is a learner, teacher, author, networker, collaborator, and is focused on new schools for new learning. Jim tweets about apps that make life easier like an app for making group work easier and how to make the best videos on YouTube. He gives great tips for delivering amazing webinars and also tweets on the best tools to create and share your PDF files online. This one might be useful down the raod in this class on the 20+ tools to create your own infographics. I really enjoyed reading his article Beyond Productivity: Information, Technology, Innovation, and Creativity. I thought you might like to read this article as well. Here is the site and embedded tweet. sco.It/6pynMV.


2 comments:

  1. Using social media in the library is a great way to spread information quickly. It is perfect for our digital era.

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  2. As I searched Facebook, I noticed very few likes or comments on positive posts. Most of the comments were thank you posts like you stated. However, I did notice many comments on negative or controversial posts.

    ReplyDelete