Social
bookmarking ?
Social bookmarking is the practice of saving bookmarks to
a
public Web site and “tagging” them with keywords.
Bookmarking,
on the other hand, is the practice of saving the address
of
a Web site you wish to visit in the future on your
computer. To
create a collection of social bookmarks, you register
with a social
bookmarking site, which lets you store bookmarks, add
tags of
your choice, and designate individual bookmarks as public
or
private. Some sites periodically verify that bookmarks
still work,
notifying users when a URL no longer functions. Visitors
to social
bookmarking sites can search for resources by keyword,
person,
or popularity and see the public bookmarks, tags, and
classification
schemes that registered users have created and saved
Delicious ?
Delicious is an online Web 2.0 social bookmarking tool
that enables you to save URL’s(Universal Resource Locator) or web addresses to
a personal account. It is a free service,and requires a registration.Adding
extensions to your browsers (Firefox and Internet Explorer) adds toolbar buttons that allow you to quickly bookmark web sites. Then, you organize them
using tags to make it easy to sort or search, add notes, or share with others in
your network. This tool allows teachers and students to save URL’s in a portable
format that can be reached from any browser, and to collaborate by sharing these
with their network.
Visit http://delicious.com or http://del.icio.usto get started with social bookmarking.
Benefits of Social Bookmarking
- Social bookmarking helps
in quick indexing by the search engines. It acts as bait to these search
engines. Within a day of your submitting your website to these bookmarking
sites, you can expect to be visited by all the major search engines.
- It also guarantees a lot
of traffic to flow from these sites to your site. The best part is that
most of that traffic would be targeted traffic. That helps in getting
return visits, especially if your website offers good, useful content.
- Generally these social
bookmarking sites let you submit a very detailed profile where you can
list all your web pages and also post links to your sites. Thus you end up
branding yourself.
Delicious in the
Classroom
Anytime/Anywhere—It’s That Easy
·
Social networking tools like Delicious
are not only brilliant for both remembering URL’s and
·
web locations, but it’s also way more
accessible. It’s better than adding to your “favorites” locally
·
on your computer because your Delicious
account is able to be accessed from any computer
·
you happen to have handy, simply by
logging in at the web site.
·
Students and staff alike should use the
tag keywords and notes to make retrieval of
·
saved locations easier. The more
detailed and accurate the keywords are, the easier it is to
·
organize and search for resources.
Cool Collaborations
·
Delicious is also great for
collaboration. The students and teachers all create a Delicious
·
account for each person, and the teacher
creates a “class account”. The students and
·
teacher share their Delicious account
names and add each other to their networks. They
·
also add the class account to the
network.
·
Now when the students (or teachers) are
bookmarking sites, they add “network tags”.
·
These are tags for their peer and class
accounts. When they tag a site to a member of
·
their network using these tags, the new
bookmark appears in their inbox for them to
·
either save or delete. Students and
teachers can now share and collaborate on their
·
research and learning for any given
project.
Thinking It Through
·
As a stand-alone concept, the idea of
simply bookmarking a website is a lower-order
·
thinking skill. What’s great about
Delicious is the advantages of properly identifying the
·
bookmark, using the descriptive mindset
needed for tagging. This way, teachers can
·
clearly see the level of understanding
of a project’s purpose in the student’s selection of
·
bookmarks. They also see how well they
understand the content and relevance of a
·
given site, from the notes and tags that
the student writes for searching purposes.
·
The teacher can also moderate the URLs
submitted by students by saving or deleting
·
them. This gives teachers a good amount
of control over content that may be deemed
·
harmful, inappropriate, or just plain
irrelevant to the underway project. As this happens,
·
the teacher can more easily guide
students toward making the right choices in their
·
quest
to amass bookmarks for project research.
Good efforts.
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