Average teens don’t use Twitter
May 19, 2009 by Lisa Mayer
Filed under Producing/Managing
An interesting post on Teens and what they think/use for social media networks. Some information is just about teens themselves, but worth a read for the Twitter info…
I was surprised to find that email is deader than ever among teens. As more of their parents and teachers are getting on Facebook (or MySpace), they see little reason to email with anyone. Thus, email is increasingly needed for having an account on various sites and for getting access to or sending attachments. But even when teens do use email for “work”, they do not use it for social purposes.
…Many teens have ZERO interest in interacting with teachers on social network sites, but there are also quite a few who are interested in interacting with SOME teachers there. Still, this is primarily a social space and their interactions with teachers are primarily to get more general advice and help. In some ways, its biggest asset in the classroom is the way in which its not a classroom tool and not loaded this way. Given that teens don’t Friend all of their classmates, there are major issues in terms of using this for groupwork because of boundary issues.
…They don’t use Twitter. When asked, teens always say that they’ll use their preferred social network site (or social media service) FOREVER as a sign of their passion for it now. If they expect that they’ll “grow out of it”, it’s a sign that the service is waning among that group at this very moment. So they’re not a good predictor of their own future usage.
…Do they really care about/use school library websites? Twitter? Pageflakes? Libguides? or only if teacher insists?
Nope, they don’t. All but Twitter are categorized as school tools and are only used when absolutely necessary and Google won’t suffice.
Wikipedia Explained on NPR’s Fresh Air
May 2, 2007 by Lisa Mayer
Filed under Uncategorized
Did you know that term “wiki” is derived from the phrase “WikiWiki”, which is the Hawaiian word for “quick”? I meant to post this awhile ago…for those of you who missed it, NPR’s Fresh Air had Wikipepdia founder Jimmy Wales on last month. It’s a good listen, he explains the basics of how to edit pages, whether they will start taking adds, and more. Here’s the interview.
From the NPR site:
Jimmy Wales helped create Wikipedia, the interactive online encyclopedia founded in 2001. Users write and edit Wikipedia entries themselves; the site also has a dedicated corps of editors. There are often “edit wars” over entries — some, including the one headlined “2006 Lebanon War,” have been edited and then re-edited thousands of times — and Wikipedia’s accuracy has been questioned by some professors and colleges, who forbid students to cite it as a source. But Wikipedia, with versions in 250 languages, is one of the top 10 sites on the Internet.

