Notebook or My Personal Learning Network
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Notebook or My Personal Learning Network
a personal notebook since summer 2013, a virtual scrapbook
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Rescooped by Gilbert C FAURE from Creative teaching and learning
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Seven great tools for curating educational content online

Seven great tools for curating educational content online | Notebook or My Personal Learning Network | Scoop.it

"The web is a treasure trove of interesting resources to use for a variety of educational purposes. To leverage the educational potential of the web and be able to make the best of it in your instruction, you need to be equipped with tools that will enable you to curate, save and share the content you come across online ..."

PadletEduclipperLiveBindersEvernote Web ClipperSymbalooEDUPinterestFeedly
Via Leona Ungerer
Gilbert C FAURE's comment, September 3, 2017 4:59 AM
scoop.it??
Rescooped by Gilbert C FAURE from Content Curation World
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Content Curation: Understanding the Why and How - a Research Study


Via Robin Good
Deanna Dahlsad's curator insight, October 15, 2013 3:59 PM

Robin Good  of Content Curation World breaks the findings down thus:


a) what people curate as relevant is not generally among the top ranked results according to popular metrics. Good stuff is not the same as what is considered normally popular or authoritative stuff.


b) content curation allows a community to synchronize around specific issues and subjects (as anticipated by Clay Shirky)


c) better and more appreciated curation is of the "structured" kind, providing additional info, meta-data and categorization.


d) curators that are highly appreciated are characterized by consistent activity and by a variety of interests (or viewpoints under the same theme) that they are capable to cover.


This is rather my experience; however, I usually explain it to my clients this way:


a) You can be doing an excellent job, but never receive the recognition, popularity, or traffic you deserve.That doesn't mean you won't be appreciated greatly by the smaller group of people who do find/read your curated works.


b) No matter the popularity of your curation, you can build and have conversations -- but remember, community cultivation not only requires additional time, but a different skill set.


c) If you're going to do it, do it well. Use tools, such as labels and tags, and *always* provide context as well as proper credits and links.


d) Consistent activity is nearly as important as showing some personality along with your knowledge. Your topic may be narrowly focused, but offer additional topics and information about you personally (not just professionally) so that people get a sense of you.

Carmenne Kalyaniwala's curator insight, October 16, 2013 2:17 AM

A research paper by Zhong, Shah, Sundaravadivelan and Sastry, King's college London, 2013

AnneMarie Cunningham's curator insight, October 17, 2013 8:28 AM

See the excellent notes from Robin Good below. Interesting to see more work emerging in this field.

Rescooped by Gilbert C FAURE from Digital-News on Scoop.it today
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Haiku Deck One of 5 "Secret" and Disruptive Content Curation Tools - Atlantic BT

Haiku Deck One of 5 "Secret" and Disruptive Content Curation Tools - Atlantic BT | Notebook or My Personal Learning Network | Scoop.it

5 Secret & Disruptive Content Curation Tools
* Scoop.it.
* Haiku Deck.
* Paper.li.
* Pinterest.
* GooglePlus.


http://www.atlanticbt.com/blog/5-secret-content-curation-tools-and-how-to-use-them/


Via Thomas Faltin
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