Eventually, you may be surprised by something that is new and exciting, and, as the Science of Love suggests, (CBC Podcast, Feb 10, 2010) that first stage of lust may set in. You want to learn and spend time and get totally familiar with that new heart in your life. You feel a close connection and want to delve deeper. Surprisingly, you eventually move past that and feel a deeper connection, as there is a world of learning, learning that can become a lifetime of growing. What you learn to deeply love is not always what made that original connection. And there is that moment of making the plunge, of risk as you open yourself to a new way of connecting and growing.
The adventure into social networking, particularly social bookmarking, has felt like that moment when you take the plunge, where you realize that what you knew and loved originally was just that original and somewhat superficial but enjoyable lust… and that there is an entire adventure out there that you had no idea about. This has been a period of recognition that my journey has only just begun and I must be open and ready to meet new challenges head on, apparently for the rest of my life, as I see no sign of this cyber world becoming less important in my future and it is my job, no, my responsibility to open myself up to it.
Social bookmarking was a totally new glimpse for me through January. It was out there, a word, an idea that I did not understand and had never contemplated. Apparently, he had been around for awhile and attracted others’ lust and love, but for me he was just a brief flash, kind of like Edward as he moves through Bella’s first moments as a whisp of wind… hmm, interesting, but a bit dangerous and new and I think I’ll play it safe. If I could carry the analogy further, I would suggest I couldn’t even tell the colour of his hair, much less look into his eyes. As someone who prides themselves in comprehension and technological risk-taking, I was less than comfortable with my total lack of cognition.
Yet, as I caught a bit more of the texture and form, I recognized and connected with a piece of my life. Social bookmarking is a method for Internet users to share, organize, search, and manage bookmarks of web resources. Organization. Oh yes, the bane of my existence. Was this finally something that would fill that empty hole, make me whole? I am making that first connection. The first twitches of love… lust began.
I am paper phobic. How can anyone work in a school for a gadjillion years and still not be able to manage the paper on their desk? I am an obsessive reader, not a billboard nor a cereal box goes unread, and yet I can never remember the places that ideas have come from nor the finite details of their contents. I have sticky notes everywhere, which I can not find, and when I do, often don’t understand. I have a favorites list that scrolls down forever, some sorted, most not. I have home notes and school notes and the laptop favorites and the political favorites. I visit classrooms and have no idea what my favourites are or where to find that fabulous note about a cyber place I visited. Connection! Electrical sparks fly and I do what great learners do, I connected social bookmarking with my browser favorites. I am in lust. Like Educause’s scenarios about Dr. Smith, (Seven Things You Should know About Social Bookmarking) I used folders to organize bookmarks, but it is inefficient, there are multiple folders, on different machines, and googling is easier but unreliable. I am not able to share, much less remember!
I read all the Trailfires, I read Merchant and Davies, and I read Richardson. I watch YouTechTips on YouTube. Tagging is the practice and method of collaboratively creating and managing tags to annotate and categorize content. I begin to understand that there are new ways of grouping and sharing and finding information. Delicious was the first to invent tags, and I learn that this new flirt of mine, social bookmarking, whom I really don't yet understand, has been hanging around since 1996! Why could I not have met him earlier?
After joining both Diigo, Delicious and iCyte, and reading about the data loss of Magnolia, I began the journey with bookmarking the trailfires on Delicious! A novel concept, I can now find all of the links Joanne gifted us with by going to Delicious. I can find them at home, I can find them at school, I can find them even when Blackboard isn’t working for me. This is better than human love; heck, it is there whenever and where ever I want this. I want it! And I can find it! No hidden liaisons for this love, it is there for me anywhere. Oh, yes, just like first love, do I really WANT it all the time? I back away, I play it safe, I retreat to some things I am more sure of. Will it betray me and turn out to be less than I hope?
I learn that I can download my favourites to Delicious bookmarks! Lust grows, and I download all 250 some-odd favourites from school. Sobering thought, I now needed to go and make these bookmarks shareable, (unlock them) and I have a chance to reconnect with things I’ve added to favourites at school for 8 years. I edit, I share, I delete, I add. I’m compulsive and want to impress my new lover, who is Delicious. I start unlocking things one by one, spending hours, and then watch Leigh Blackall's video, Renaming Delicious Tags. I love my lover so much I decide I need to talk about him and share him with others. (Sound familiar? Lust is very powerful!) Using best practices from teaching, I know that I learn best what I teach others, so incorporate bookmarking into a cooperative teaching unit.
I have seen tag clouds before and lose several days trying add a cloud of my many new bookmarks onto my blog. I want to have a widget, put it in the side, so it doesn't disappear further and further down the page. I look through blogger, I look at colleagues web pages, and finally I settle on a post. I loose many hours working on this. Low and behold, I have 100 tags showing and I learn to edit the html code (Paul, you would be proud of me!) to show the top 50.
I did explored similar platforms but my first encounter was with Delicious, and just like in love, I looked around to see what the choices were. Perhaps unfortunately, I am monogamous and although I discovered that Diigo had more bells and whistles (sticky notes, highlighting, full page saving rather than just the url,) I’m a loyal kinda gal and stuck to my first love. I’ve found that I prefer the simpler kind of option in life. I just don’t have the time or interest to play around with two guys at once, although I did do the looking. I know that two can be just as exciting as one in this world, but I just can't do it. (Just looking can’t be all bad with love, right?)
Every love has connections to what has been in your past. In the early 1980’s, I was an educational risk-taker, automating my school library. Eventually, I travelled and helped others learn to do likewise. Mainly a self trained A-Type kind of person, I struggled with Sears versus actual library needs. My grassroots training knew I could not deviate from SEARS List, my card typing-cross referencing anal retentive personality knew this, but I confess that, given the search capability of an online system, I added subject headings that fit our schools need (aka local tags). This was my deepest secret which I finally share, like an addict who eventually confesses. More than that, I shared this strategy as an automation consultant (often saying, “Don’t tell anyone I said this but you actually CAN add subject headings (tags) where you want.”) No one will catch you, no one will fire you, everyone will thank you that YOU CAN finally find the prescribed resources for your curriculum in your library.)
I believe that Folksomony is an idea that has its roots in the thinking that emerged in the 1980’s when many of us saw the need to understand ourselves socially and collectively rather than as a set of rules. I was not the only person who questioned the dynamics of systems that limited connective language in libraries (Sears) and the emerging learning world. Glimpsing into our future, we will see so many cross-relationships between programs and language and searching that our entire world of knowledge will open up for using ways we cannot imagine.
I am in the nether lands of moving from lust to love. Don’t misinterpret my feelings, I am one of those who grasp hold of the potential and strive to make it my own true being. I save lust for the important and I believe social bookmarking deserves a brilliantly strong place in this emotional stratosphere. There is so much to learn and discover. I feel I have dived into a world that was invisible in my past, an idea that had no real form. Ahead of me there is a wealth to learn, and a whole new way of interacting with information. I love the medium as it is safe and it is growth orientated and I can use it to build my connections and links with the world. Besides allowing my students to share bookmarks on research topics, we can subscribe to RSS feeds and receive updates. I can build professional networking. The potential to collaborate with other schools particularly in our Technology Without Borders Project, is exciting. I have no fear of sharing this with my students, I believe this relationship is a safe learning haven for them, too!
Untagged Resources Used
Blackall, L. (Producer) (Retrieved from the World Wide Web: 2010, February 5). Renaming Del.icio.us tags. Podcast retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7amUaTv-S_U
Davies, J. & Merchant, G. (2009). Web 2.0 for schools: Learning and social participation. New York, NY: Peter Lang.
Darrow, Rob. California Dreamin’ (Retrieved from the World Wide Web: 2010, February 5) http://www.icyte.com/saved/robdarrow.wordpress.com/87245%202019
DeGroot, Joanne. Social Bookmarking Trailfires.
McNeely, Ben. Using Technology as a learning tool, Not Just a Cool New thing (2010, February 13)http://www.educause.edu/Resources/EducatingtheNetGeneration/UsingTechnologyasaLearningTool/6060
Put a Delicious Tag in Blog (Retreived from the World Wide Web: 2010, February 3) http://tips.blogdoctor.me/2009/04/put-delicious-tag-cloud-in-blog.html
Richardson, W. (2009). Blogs, wikis, podcasts, and other powerful web tools for classrooms. 2nd ed. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.
2 comments:
Hi Nancy
I love your style of writing. I felt like I was reading a romance novel not a technical description of social bookmarking and as such I found that I was able to and interested in reading the entire post. You have obviously done a lot of work in this area and it seems that you have found a "new love". Be careful though, as love can be a dangerous thing. I, on the other hand am not sure that I would consider my experience with this learning similar to following a love. That is a lot more fun but maybe just as much work!
Ed
Hello
Looking forward to your next post
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