[Technology 1534] Social Networking Part VII: Lessons LearnedEmily May emay at obtjobs.orgWed Feb 13 16:08:39 EST 2008
Lessons learned. Engaging in social networking can be a tremendous asset for your program, but one of its greatest selling points perhaps is that even if it doesn't work for you, it is free and relatively fool-proof, so you have little to lose. That being said, here are some lessons that we've learned along the way: * Set up the comments section so that an administrator must approve or deny what is posted; * Verify how each individual is connected to your organization; do not accept friend requests from people who are not connected to your organization in some way (for us, out of state folks are a dead give-away). Many people on MySpace or other sites request to be friends with people they don't know as a way to get their number of friends up. * Each profile includes employment information and student's state and city of residence. If your student updates their profile regularly, reading this information can be a way to track them if they leave your program unexpectedly; * When your "friends" are on-line a little signal pops up to indicate they are. We sometimes use this tool to see who is on-line instead of doing their work in class (we teach computer classes). We also use this tool to see who skipped classes but is at home playing on the internet; and * Get email address and MySpace information from students on the first day of class. Make it part of your regular intake process. Be sure to verify the information and request to be "friends" with them to get the connection started. I hope this case study has been helpful to those of you who are interested in using social networking technologies to advance your own organization's goals. I will be available to answer questions through the end of the day tomorrow. I look forward to hearing more from you about your experiences with social networking! ___________________________________ Emily May Special Projects Coordinator Opportunities for a Better Tomorrow 783 4th Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11232 718-369-0303 emay at obtjobs.org <mailto:emay at obtjobs.org> -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.nifl.gov/pipermail/technology/attachments/20080213/371a4695/attachment.html
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