I always find it interesting to see what search terms people use to find what they are looking for (or not looking for). On that note, I thought I would share a quick behind the scenes of keyword searching for my article, The Effect of Automation on Academic Library Staffing: A Discussion . There is no abstract or keywords attached to this title, so the results are truly from within the fulltext searching. These stats are generated through the Bpress statistics tool.
Digital literacy: Are social media skills required for success?
Interesting article about the impact of social media on employee skill expectations and the rise of social media training programs. “Pamela Tate, president and chief executive of the Council for Adult and Experiential Learning, based in Chicago, said digital literacy, including understanding social networking, is now a required skill. They are essential skills that are needed to operate in the world and in the workplace,” she said.
Facebook kills library's historical profiles
Sooo… Facebook has already killed the historical profile accounts which were written about well... just about everywhere (Google Joe McDonald) although it seems like they also killed a potentially great PR and marketing campaign. “While McDonald and Lewis initially only had friends who were distant relatives, their lists of connections swelled from just over 100 each to more than 1,000. They were featured in Mashable, The Chronicle of Higher Education, Yahoo! News and the UK’s Daily Mail.
- Read more about Facebook kills library's historical profiles
- Log in or register to post comments
ACRL new media/visual literacy standards for higher ed
“The increasing dominance of images and visual media in contemporary culture is changing what it means to be literate in the 21st century. Today’s society is highly visual, and visual imagery is no longer supplemental to other forms of information. New digital technologies have made it possible for almost anyone to create and share visual media. Yet the pervasiveness of images and visual media does not necessarily mean that individuals are able to critically view, use, and produce visual content.
- Read more about ACRL new media/visual literacy standards for higher ed
- Log in or register to post comments
Job hunting using linkedin
For those of you job hunting (or posting jobs), have you seen what linkedin is doing to help you?
LinkedIn Jobs now brings you guaranteed applicants,in 3 simple steps.Sign up for the LinkedIn Jobs Guarantee and post your job on LinkedIn now through November 19, 2011.
- Read more about Job hunting using linkedin
- Log in or register to post comments
the great unfriend-a-thon
An open letter to my friends on facebook:I hope we can be adults about this but just like a garden, my Facebook network is in need of a little maintenance. I need to weed out the folks who aren't using Facebook anymore.
- Read more about the great unfriend-a-thon
- Log in or register to post comments
Peekyou, search across the web, social media & more
peerindex (a reputation management/metrics site) has launched a new search engine called peekyou (http://www.peekyou.com). It searches across facebook, linkedin, twitter, friendster, myspace, several people search engines (intellius, spokeo, etc.) and even wikipedia.
- Read more about Peekyou, search across the web, social media & more
- Log in or register to post comments
Big changes to Facebook privacy (an overview)
So Facebook is rolling out new changes to your news feed (you may have it already). On the plus side for privacy: You can control who sees stuff that is posted about you (like tagged photos) which finally closes one huge privacy leak (changes will not affect older photos but you can retrospectively change them - tomorrow's blog topic!).
- Read more about Big changes to Facebook privacy (an overview)
- Log in or register to post comments
Call for proposals: Connecting, Assessing & Innovatinges
Call for Proposals Due September 7: ELI 2012 Annual MeetingSubmit a preconference seminar or session proposal by September 7 for the ELI 2012 Annual Meeting in Austin, Texas, and online, February 13–15.
Question of the day: Declutter your inbox and how to conquer email overflow
So, a question came up about how to handle huge volumes of email. There are alot of different approaches out there, but here are a few ideas that work for me:
- Think before you send:
- Don't cc EVERYBODY. Some people may not need individual workflow emails, just an occasional project update is all that is needed for some people.
- Don't use return receipt WITH read request acknowledgments. If someone reads your email obviously, they got it.