Scooped by Beth Kanter |
The importance of discovery and organization in the curation process
Dennis O'Connor - a fellow curator here on Scoop.it gives a reminder about the importance of having multiple sources for content discovery - and being organized. One of the features I like best about Scoop.It is that you can tag your articles. Makes it easy to go back and find stuff later.
Here's what Ally Greer highlighted in her scoop.
Develop multiple sources for your topics
It's important to carefully think through the keywords that you set for your topic so that Scoop.it can crawl the web and provide you with interesting and relevant content and inspiration. In addition to taking full advantage of this, Dennis also uses other tools like Twitter, StumbleUpon, and Prismatic to find content to share on Scoop.it. Once he finds the content he wants to share with his audience, he uses Scoop.it as his social media hub to add value to that content and share it everywhere.
Tag your posts
Dennis takes a lot of time to tag each of his posts. This allows him, he explained, to assemble publications based upon his tagged topics. When he's using his information on Scoop.it for his E-learning classes, it's easy for him to filter his Scoop.it pages based upon different subjects and easily compile a list of posts and articles on appropriate topics to provide to his students. Something interesting that Dennis does with his tagged articles is to pull them by subject and create "special editions" of his topics on his blog for special classes and events that he is teaching.
This picture here gave me some insight onto what was going on within the article.
I liked this article because it deals digital information fluency.
Good graphic for Ss research too!