The Twitter Lists
Mashable, one of my favorite websites, has several different Twitter lists going on its well-known Mega Lists page these days, including:
85 Comedians to Follow on Twitter
100+ of the Best Authors on Twitter
85+ of the Best Twitterers Designers Should Know (scuse me?)
Twitter Professors: 18 People to Follow for a Real-time Education
If you’re a sucker for lists, like me, then you might want to check these out. Here’s just a sampling of some of the Twitterers on the lists:

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Survey: Barriers to Web 2.0 Use in Schools Still Exist
Not surprisingly, a new survey shows that teachers and students are driving the adoption of Web 2.0 technologies in schools, but that human and technological barriers are holding back the use of these technologies as learning tools in many classrooms.
The survey, commissioned by Lightspeed Systems and Thinkronize Inc., creator of the kids’ search engine netTrekker, shows that online communication tools for parents and students have caught on quickly, but online social networking for instruction has a long way to go.
The most frequently identified “human-factor” barriers to the use of Web 2.0 technology were:
– the need to monitor appropriate use of online social networks (55 percent)
– lack of teacher knowledge about how to use the technology effectively (51 percent)
– teacher perceptions about its lack of instructional value or appropriateness (48 percent)
The most frequent technology barriers were:
– concerns about student safety (76 percent)
– concerns about district network or data security (35 percent)
– limited support systems, including technology personnel (27 percent)
You can read more about the survey at eSchoolNews Online.
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Nings as Social Networks
Image via CrunchBaseI know that I’ve written about Nings for educators before, but I was recently asked by the National School PR Association to write a description of how Nings can be useful for anyone as a tool for social networking. The key thing to remember about using Ning as a social network platform (for adults) is that it’s NOT Facebook or MySpace. Although I have a fairly active Facebook page for professional and personal use, adults I speak to often cringe at the mere thought of creating a Facebook account.
So Nings are friendly, but generally free of rock music downloads, college drinking photos and references to “Jackass” and “The Real World.”
Here’s my description of how Nings can be used by thoughtful adults, along with links to several to which I can claim membership:
Using a Ning to Build a Network
Nings have become an increasingly popular way to network with other people and groups who share similar interests with you and your school district. Ning currently hosts more than 500,000 networks on the web, and that number is growing.
Ning provides free, easy-to-navigate online software that allows you to create a social networking website available to a larger group of members. Once created, it can be used as a platform for sharing best practices, links, photos, videos and other information. Generally, the success of a Ning depends entirely on its members and how they use it.
Here are a few examples of how you can use a Ning:
- PR departments can use a Ning site to share publications and news items about a school district with anyone who signs up as a member (parents, students, staff).
- School district administrative and leadership teams can work together and communicate via a Ning, and avoid having to use long email lists and attachments to share information.
- PTAs can create Nings for members.
- Teachers can create a Ning for their department, their school, their district, or for fellow teachers around the country.
Nings can be used for small niche networks (teachers within a department, for example) or in a larger way (national or state public relations professionals).You can set the privacy level, restricting membership by invitation only or keeping it open to anyone who wants to join. Free Ning tools include discussion forums, chats, video sharing, photo sharing, link sharing, and more. You can also set the frequency with which you’ll receive updates from your Ning groups.
The Ning Premium service, at $19.95 a month, allows you to point your Ning to a domain name and to add or delete advertising, among other details. But the free service fits most groups well. You can also choose the domain name option for $4.95 a month.
Here in the Hudson Valley region of New York, we have created a group Ning for school public relations professionals, where we can share best practices and put our collective brain trust together on such topics as the local press, school budget challenges, and upcoming meetings. We have also created several subgroups within the Ning, including one on using technology.
Here are links to the Hudson Valley PR Ning and other sample Nings on the web:
Classroom 2.0 (A professional development Ning for teachers with 18,000 members)
PR Open Mic (A Ning for PR students, faculty members and practitioners with 4,100 members.
The Hurricane Information Center (a Ning for individuals interested in hurricane updates, with 700 members)
The HudSPRA Network (A newly created Ning created for school PR professionals in the NY Hudson Valley region.)
http://hudspra.ning.com/ (We might be creating a new domain name for this site, so if this link doesn’t work, try http://www.hudspra.org.)
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Adults: All Aboard for the Web 2.0 Train
Image via Wikipedia
According to the Pew Internet and American Life Project, social networking has become more mainstream among adults. That includes me, at least the last time I checked the crow’s feet in my 10x magnification mirror.
According to the folks at Pew, the number of adult internet users who have a profile on an online social network site has more than quadrupled in the past four years — from 8% four years ago, to 35% now. That’s amazing, and encouraging. I have conducted a number of workshops on the subject of social media, and I still get attendees who look like deer in the headlights when I talk about Facebook, LinkedIn, and the whole sphere of social networking and social bookmarking.
On the other hand, I get plenty of people — of all ages — who are eager to dive right in.
Although those of us over the age of 18 stumbling through the social networks should be proud of ourselves for trying, don’t get cocky. We’re still light-years behind those lucky kids between the ages of 12 to 17. A whopping 65 percent of those crazy kids have an online profile on one of the big social networks — Facebook and MySpace, primarily.
It seems that the older we get, the less use we seem to have for social networks.
According to the Pew study, 75% of adults ages 18-24 use these networks, compared to just 7% of adults 65 and older. “At its core, use of online social networks is still a phenomenon of the young,” the study says.
Other age groups and their use of social networking sites:
– 57 percent of those aged 25 to 34
– 30 percent of those ages 35 to 44
– 19 percent of those aged 45 to 54
– 10 percent of those aged 55 to 64
Another interesting finding: We adults use social networks for professional and personal reasons, and we often maintain multiple profiles, generally on different sites.
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More on Social Media, Colleges and Universities
Many thanks to Heather Mansfield of Diosa Communications for promoting my post, “Why Schools Need to Get on the Social Media Bandwagon,” on her website. You can find my post here and at PROpenMic, one of my favorite Ning social networking sites. Speaking of Ms. Mansfield, she’s a web 2.0 consultant and expert with a great site that, among other things, lists good reads on the topic of using Web 2.0 tools in education. On her higher education page, she lists Web 2.0 Articles, Blogs, and Resources for Higher Education.
She also highly recommends the use of MySpace by colleges and universities, since they’re listed there on MySpaceSchools anyway. Here are two great links she sent along:
Her MySpace Portal
Her FaceBook page
Let’s see if her hard work pays off and if colleges and universities eventually get on the Web 2.0 bandwagon.


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