Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts

Monday, 21 October 2013

Final Reflection: END OF LINE

Today I will take the time to reflect on my blog for INN333 Information Programs. From the get go, I was really annoyed at having to use a blog for this class and to have over ten entries which needed to be completed. I knew it would be a challenge for my time management and organisational skills, but I didn’t have much hope for it being a “great” learning experience, or a learning experience at all really.

The amount of entries was an annoyance, an inconvenience and any other synonyms which go along with that sentiment. Each Friday I felt as though I was making progress and being caught up on all my assessment, only for Monday to arrive and feel like crap again as there was so much that needed to be done. While normally I enjoy a challenge and try to see it as “personal development”, I really did not get that sense of satisfaction at all.

I will say this, I enjoyed the Play activities. Sure, I’d get started and be frustrated as hell at wasting my time on something so simple which would always take ages to work out or download when I had so much other assessment to focus on. Finally, when each activity was completed I would feel pretty good at learning the new software or trying out something new and it was fun. There were times when I learnt new stuff (like Screen-O-Matic) that I thought how this could be really useful to know when I hopefully get a library job in the future.

However, I would then realise that I had to do a Reflect activity which was not fun. Most of the time it was at least loosely related in some way to the Play activity, however,  in some cases I would feel as though I was repeating myself from the first activity and not making any new comments. Maybe if instead of having them as separate activities but joined together it would make more sense in my head. That way I would be able to provide an overview of my experience with learning new technology and then how I think it would relate to a library context. I’m sure that was the point of the Play and Reflect activities, but having them separate was difficult for me to engage with them.

I also struggled with commenting or contributing to other people’s blogs or on the Facebook page. It wasn’t that I wasn’t reading, I just didn’t want to be a jerk and have my two cents every five minutes on some topic which I don’t really care about. In my Week 2 Reflect activity I stated then that I hate overshare and don’t feel comfortable on such an open or public space. I still hate overshare and I still hate sharing in public forums. Therefore, in that regard it is incredibly easy for me to say that I will never, ever contribute to a blog again unless it is to pass a class. I still cannot comprehend sharing about my personal life. Physically, it makes me ill. Thinking of it brings on a rapid heartbeat and an urge to have a beer and chill out with friends.

Yeah, that’s my reflection. I did enjoy this class and I did learn new things. There will definitely be things I’ve learnt from this that I will take to my professional career and most likely, personal life and make some dodgy things to annoy my family. I can’t wait to finish this proposal (which I am actually excited about doing) and then I get to go camping… sit in the sun and drink copious amounts of beer.

To end this, I will share this… I have been asked to become the Brewmaster at work… This is definitely related to my professional development as it is one step closer to becoming a Beer Librarian! #dreamscancometrue

*I would like to add before you can say it, I’m not an alcoholic, I enjoy beer but in moderation and with maturity and I do not endorse binge drinking or non-moderation drinking… except for end of semester celebrations, totally deserving.

*If you are interested in joining the LIS Social group for QUT students on Facebook please follow the link >
We will be organising/already in talks for end of semester shenanigans.
*Can anyone see the Battlestar Galatica reference? Totally devastated that I've finished it, but definitely most rewarding experience TV has ever offered.

Thursday, 22 August 2013

Week 6 - Play: Information Agencies on Facebook

This week we have been asked to share on Facebook an information agency that uses Facebook or other social media sites.

I chose to share ALIA Social Media Group. This group describes itself as as a group for 'all people interested in using, connecting with and promoting Social Media use in Australian Libraries' (ALIA Social Media Group, Facebook page).

I think with the current climate of libraries using Facebook and social media (whether they are allowed to by their parent organisation or not) is interesting and it is important that libraries make the most of social media and not just "wing it".

ALIA Social Media Group is also available to follow on twitter - @ALIAsocialmed

Here is an attached screenshot of my post.


Week 6 - Reflect: The Tide Turning of Social Media Sites

I remember back in high school being a MySpace addict. I remember rearranging my Top Friends or being horrified when my so-called best friend rearranged her Top Friends and I wasn’t in the Top Ten! It was the days of “Emos” and everyone being so alternative they all shared the same skinny jeans and mascara… I guess not much has changed really. I can’t exactly remember when I changed to Facebook. I could go back on my profile and see but that’s not fun, and the past is the past for a reason (I just wish it wasn’t on my Facebook page).

Last year a good friend of mine, who is actually pretty up with knowing all the latest trends, told me about Google+ and sent me an invite and I distinctly remember her saying that it would be the death of Facebook. I figured when a few more of my friends joined I would think about it some more.

Well. That never happened.

I now have a Google+ account, again because another class gave me that added motivation of doing everything on Google opposed to Facebook. There isn’t much there to make it incredibly special, but one thing I am noticing is the lack of advertisements. I have advertisements in my Outlook and Facebook accounts and it’s getting really annoying. It would be idealistic of me to say I would consider moving to something without ads, but realism strikes and if another social media site become popular… The ads would return.

I’m sure that there will be a Facebook and/or Google+ killer out there. Social media sites are just like social communities – there’s a constant evolution of what’s in vogue and what’s not. It will be interesting to see however, how Facebook deals with that. MySpace is still around, I think it’s pretty big on the independent music scene so up and coming bands can get out there. That would be a pretty big crowd and would definitely keep MySpace going. Facebook though hasn’t changed much essentially (apart from the constant reworkings of the timeline and layout so people actually think they have changed something when they really haven’t). While it has gotten to the core of what people want in a social media site, would they have the innovation to change if they actually got serious competition from somewhere?


And I wonder when that will happen… I bet there will be a movie on it!

Thursday, 1 August 2013

Week 2 - Reflect: Blogging and Channel You

This week I have been asked to reflect on my “online identity”.

I do not really like having an online identity at all. When it comes to Facebook I have less than 100 friends and I’m brutal with my defriending sessions and privacy settings. For university I have had to create Twitter and LinkedIn profiles. While I enjoy using Facebook and now Twitter, I sometimes think that the whole saga of an online persona is overdramatic and excessive. I do not think it is necessary to post on Facebook every single second about every single thought that has ever occurred in your life.

I guess I’m a bit judgemental against people who feel the need to overshare. I overshare with my friends and family in person but they are people I trust and who won’t share my overshare (but recent events have made me very cautious against one person in particular). I don’t feel comfortable when people overshare, generally on Facebook that equals an immediate “unfriend” option.

I was always raised that certain things in life were personal and private and not for general sharing. But my Facebook feed reminds me daily that that’s not the case today. I know who people want to vote for, their various sicknesses or illnesses, their opinions on just about everything… and it annoys me. I felt nervous when I posted about having completed my first semester of my Masters because I didn’t want people to think I was bragging (even though it was definitely brag worthy). I’m scared I’ll become an “oversharer”, it terrifies me.

Kate Davis mentions in her blog that she recently (in 2010) cut back her Facebook profile to no longer include her professional circle. This makes sense to me. I personally don’t think many of my friends really understand what having a professional online identity means and there are high chances that those photos from the weekend will be tagged to my profile (which they were… the annual Food & Wine Festival repercussion).


So unlike what Jason Fitzpatrick (2010) advises; there will be no way that I will be linking all my accounts together. I don’t think it’s professional for my future employers to know what I did over the weekend or my thoughts on politics, my dinner or how much I love my boyfriend. Those things are personal to me and would never go up on Facebook anyway (unless it’s the pig on the spit at Christmas, I will be sharing that to brag to my family!).

Reference List
Fitzpatrick, J. (2010, May 5). Establish and Maintain Your Online Identity [Web log post]. Retrieved from http://lifehacker.com/5531465/establish-and-maintain-your-online-identity
Davis, K. (2010, June 7). The personal-professional divide: moving the line [Web log post]. Retrieved from http://virtuallyalibrarian.com/2010/06/07/the-personal-professional-divide-moving-the-line/