Showing posts with label curation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label curation. Show all posts

Saturday, March 12, 2016

Some ideas for searching help ....


Just posting a few links that lead to much more:

One is Illume Learning which I first came across in an email.  This site makes me think of open educational resources and the efforts to make those more widely available.  Illume Learning is the result of a collaboration between founders Peter Quandt and Justin Irizarry.  On the site, one can search for key terms in a wide variety of sources (books, periodicals, even syllabi and lectures or Khan Academy).  I have shown this to other librarians and we want to spend more time investigating this currently free source.   

My first impressions center on the amount of material that is available – almost too much to efficiently search. The filters (e.g., choose a newspaper name or date range) and advanced searching (add a second term) appear to only work sometimes or in certain patterns but not in others. Although the site may still be under development, it has some exciting potential. This video will give you an idea of the range of sources:

In the meantime, I often turn to the Libguides Community to find ideas of links related to new projects and topics.  The search function could be improved there, too, by allowing for a search of multiple terms and adding K-8 and 9-12 subcategories. Increasingly, it seems that only version1 Libguides are available and that should definitely be addressed.
http://journalistsresource.org/tip-sheets/reporting/polling-fundamentals-journalists

Saving what is arguably the best for last, here is a link to another favorite, the Journalist’s Resource, a project of the Harvard Kennedy School's Shorenstein Center and the Carnegie-Knight Initiative, which recently posted about “Reporting with Web and Social Media Data.” Last Fall, they also offered a timely pre-election review of “Polling Fundamentals and Concepts.”  Our journalism teachers and student researchers turn to this well-regarded site on a regular basis.  

Monday, October 29, 2012

Educause article on Content Curation

Robin Good, a curator I follow on Scoop.it, shared a technology brief from Educause which attempts to introduce and explain the emerging trend of social curation:

 "7 Things You Should Know About Social Content Curation"

From the official abstract: "An emerging class of online tools, including Pinterest, Scoop.it, EduClipper, and others, allows users to quickly and easily gather, organize, and share collections of online resources, particularly visual content. These applications make it easy to collect and post disparate bits of content, providing visual groupings at a glance that can reveal important patterns. In academic settings, they can facilitate more visual thinking and discussion among students while providing a means to share collections of online content."


ePUB: http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/epub/ELI7089.epub
PDF: http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ELI7089.pdf

I currently am using Scoop.it to experiment with curating content for Election 2012.  This tool allows the user to editorialize and also provide visual content.
Tools like this seem to be just right for current events such as Hurricane Sandy and ongoing conflicts such as the Arab Spring.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Curating News Content from Social Media

Here are some great tips which I  endorse because they make good use of Tweetdeck.
I cannot even imagine doing power searching without the use of Tweetdeck.

Technology editor (from Journalism.co.uk) Sarah Marshall gathered ideas and posted them all in one place: 

How to: use social media in newsgathering

tips:
1) organize chaos by using Tweetdeck
4) make use of hashtags
5) keep your key words simple

6) use Twitter's advanced search

7) search by time or search by location

8) track keywords shared on social media by using RSS feeds, adding them to your Google

Reader account or another RSS feed reader.


9) Use Google advanced operators to search Facebook--this will yield more results than a 
search within Facebook


10)  Most importantly, verify your sources  --many tips are included in the article above

For more information listen to this podcast about tips and tools and practical advice for

curating news as 
Sarah Marshall interviews

Monday, September 24, 2012

Get Going with Content Curation Tools

After learning from Robin Good, I decided to check out some of the suggested tools for curation to keep up and start my own collections.  Here are some that I looked at today:
Gimme Bar Library




Welcome to Gimme Bar!

Get a head start, fill out your Gimme Bar Library with your goodies from these services:

  • Backup Instagram

  • Backup Twitter

  • Backup Delicious

  • Backup Pinboard










There's an elephant logo, but it's definitely not Evernote!


From the BO.LT website:
"Bolt allows anyone to permanently capture and share anything on the web, including entire, working web pages.  Members create their own collections that they can keep private or share instantly on Bolt or other social networks.  "Bolts" are not just images or links, they are complete, working copies of the pages that can be recalled by links controlled by the user.  These bolts still link to the original page, but when that page goes away, your Bolt stays.  No more diappearing pages or broken link. Once you have Bolted, you can instantly share your Bolts and collections on Tumblr, Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest, and even BufferApp."

Trailmeme is a way to tell stories with Web content.

A short video explaining the concept of trails and what you can do with them!

An awesome curation tool which shares context and relationships.  
I could also see this as an awesome student presentation tool.

More tools worth checking out for personal use:

Tools like Curated.by, StorifyScoop.it, Blekko, BagTheWeb, BlogBridge, KeepstreamPearltrees.comBundlr  are all worth checking out. 

Howard Rheingold has used Pearltrees to find those pearls on curation!

See also:  DragOnTape for Video Curation  

Robin Good has created a compilation of videos on the topic of curation!  Watch and learn.

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Why and How We Should Curate Content for Our Students

Multimedia curator Robin Good believes that content curation and education are intertwined. Recently, Howard Rheingold** posted this video podcast interview in 2011 with Good about curation-"What is is, what it requires, why it's important and how to do it".  



Good's Content Curation for Education and Learning presented @Emerge 2012 also helps you to wrap your mind about how content curation is different than just sharing through social media.  It is the intent to contribute to the global brain which goes deeper than just liking something or tweeting it or re-tweeting. 
Curation is about making sense of a topic for a specific audience. It is not only that the overwhelming abundance of information begs to be organized, it is also the necessity for giving context to information --especially for our students. 

The emergence of open courseware, elearning depositories, creative commons, etc. help us to create our own teaching materials and at the same time remind us of the growing need for evaluation of resources.  Students are increasingly required to comprehend a topic from multiple perspectives.  It is our job as librarians to explore topics with them and enable that to happen. The books we buy, the courses we teach are increasingly multidisciplinary. The skills which the 21st Century workforce needs increasingly require collaboration and social intelligence. In our Integrated Global Studies School the IGSS  teachers are taking control of their own courses by creating their own interactive textbooks/course materials. Good gives the example of Knowmia which has thousands of video lessons from great teachers around the world which would facilitate flipping the classroom.  There is currently enough video available from everywhere, if you have the time to curate it, to flip your classroom instruction and give more individualized attention to each student. Here is Good's rich collection of curated education websites which teachers can use to create their own content.

To view a Mindomo map of all the curation tools mentioned by Robin Good: click here.


From Robin Good, who I follow on Scoop.it , I am now learning from Joshua Merritt, Sr. Manager of Content & Creative Strategy @BMC Software.
In Will Richardson's new book, Why School, I learned that effective  21st Century learners understand the benefits of "learning from strangers". 

Upon reflection, I also realize that the only way to keep up with what's really going on with 21st Century education is to learn from others at the pace that our students are learning from others. Which means read, read, read....online.


I enjoyed Merritt's recent blog post stating that if "curating content is easy, you're doing it wrong". 
  • Stop playing the volume game. ---put quality first
  • You need an opinion --what value can you add?
  • Dig far and wide --look for unique perspectives
  • It pays to cite your sources.
  • Treat curating like you are creating original art.
    • **Rheingold is a visiting lecturer in Stanford University‘s Department of Communication where he teaches two courses, “Digital Journalism” and “Virtual Communities and Social Media”. He is a lecturer in U.C. Berkeley‘s School of Information where he teaches “Virtual Communities and Social Media” and where he previously taught “Participatory Media/Collective Action”.

    Saturday, September 15, 2012

    A Fine Example of Curation

    Earth's History in 2 Minutes:
    When students curate the web, they can create powerful visual storytelling. It has over 100,000 views.

    YouTube description:
    A project I made for video productions class "Cutaway Productions" at my high school. I don't own the rights to the song or the pictures and I am not trying to claim them, I just did this video for fun and I spent many a hour on it so please dont sue me.


    Song: Mind Heist (yes it is from Inception)
    by: Zack Hemsey


    Sunday, September 09, 2012

    We Live in a World of Too Much Information

    What happens when Google's search results aren't enough? Or, think about this: what has happened since Google's ranking algorithm got gamed? Lots!

    If we couldn't curate by hand with Netscape Navigator in the mid-1990s, how can we do it now with hundreds of millions of websites?  The answer is actually crowd-sourcing curation. We now crowd source curation of information and then ultimately, the process will start all over again once the Google search algorithms kick in.

    Wikipedia defines curation as the sorting, categorizing, and presenting of material from multiple sources which creates a unique editorial experience for readers.

    There's a lot of grumbling out there by folks who create original content and others who don't attribute their sources to the original creators.

    Curator’s Code is an attempt to standardize “via” links and attribution from link blogs and aggregators with two new symbols:
    • ᔥ means “via”
    • ↬ means “hat tip”
    You can drag a bookmarklet to your browser when you are "grabbing information" from the Internet in order to give attribution to sources.

    The good news is that there are many curation tools available to help us track the news and current events:

    Here are a few tools I recently discovered which will be added to our Election 2012 website.


    NewsWhip  
    --tracks all the news published using ~ 5,000 English-language sources and "gathers social data for each story – how many shares, likes, tweets and comments it has – at repeated intervals, building a live picture of how popular it is, right now. With this information, it calculates a social speed at which each story is travelling. The process is unique, new, and patent pending."  The NewsWhip Score shows how fast a story is spreading through Facebook and Twitter.

    BoxFish -
    TV's information search.  Search every word spoken on Television in real time--a new layer of discovery for television.  Do a keyword search and try it for current events.


    pulse - read your news anywhere, gathers your favorite sites together, transforming them into a colorful visually based mosaic. Apps available for iphone, ipad, android, and kindle.

    RawStory- a progressive news site focusing on stories often ignored by mainstream media. Draws attention to policy, politics, legal and human rights stories.

    NewsPin - pick the topics you care about and this tool finds the best articles and brings them to you so you can share them.

    Storyful - curation of the "smartest" conversations about world events by professional journalists who glean the most important news and separate it from the "noise of the real-time web".  This is a subscription service with a free trial.

    Google: Politics and Elections - (Google is trying to curate!)
    This source draws from Google news on the Presidential candidates and the issues including:

    More on Content Curation:


    5 Curation Apps and Examples With a Wow! Factor

    Alltop - the biggest aggregator and craziest curator I know.....

    Friday, August 31, 2012

    Curating Content with Tumblr

    This Prezi was curated by Buffy Hamilton on Scoop.it
    It highlights how libraries can take advantage of Tumblr to increase their public library profile and connect with patrons. Many great ideas here.