Abstract

This exploratory study examines student tagging activity within a five-week social bookmarking unit. Students in six sections of a course were tasked with locating, tagging, and then highlighting and discussing course-related materials using Diigo, a social bookmarking tool. Three different tagging approaches were tested: dictionary only, freestyle only, and dictionary + freestyle. Analysis focused on accuracy and rates of student tagging, popularity of different tag types Findings show that most students were able to tag with high rates of accuracy after a single brief lesson. The dictionary-only approach led to fewer tags overall as well as fewer single-use tags than freestyle tagging. It also resulted in students applying useful classes of tags, such as type of content, that did not emerge within the freestyle tag groups’ folksonomies. However, freestyle tagging was not without its merits, and provided opportunities for students to include tags that reflect relevant interests and more specific topics that were not addressed in the tag dictionary. The combined approach, if carefully taught and applied, appears to have the greatest potential for supporting student information literacy skills.

Highlights

  • Social bookmarking applications, such as Diigo, the now-defunct but previously popular del.icio.us, and Pinterest, provide support for sharing links to online resources with others

  • Tagging is a standard part of the sharing process enabled by social bookmarking tools, many people are familiar with the concept from popular social media platforms, such as Twitter

  • In this study, tagging was embedded within a larger instructional activity

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Social bookmarking applications, such as Diigo, the now-defunct but previously popular del.icio.us, and Pinterest, provide support for sharing links to online resources with others. Beyond link sharing, these tools facilitate the addition of notes and allow users to classify resources. Social bookmarking is an activity that involves locating Internet-based materials, classifying and describing them, and sharing the annotated URL for those materials within a web-based tool for later retrieval by other Internet users. The classification part of the social bookmarking process uses tags. Tagging is a standard part of the sharing process enabled by social bookmarking tools, many people are familiar with the concept from popular social media platforms, such as Twitter. Tend to just use a word without a symbol

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call