A keynote for the Interlend 2015 Conference. Blog post explaining these slides in more detail at: http://www.ned-potter.com/blog/visitors-and-residents-useful-social-media-in-libraries.
The Digital Natives myth is readily accepted but ultimately damaging. As students (and staff) come into our higher education system, to make blanket assumptions about their abilities with or understandings of technology based only on their date of birth is to do them a disservice.
An alternative way to explore peoples' use of the net is the Visitors and Residents model from Le Cornu and White (first brought to my attention by Donna Lanclos). I find this a proplerly useful way of thinking, which can help us as libraries provide geniunely useful social media for our users, whether they are in Visitor mode or Resident mode.
This presentation explores why the Digital Natives theory is a bust, introduces V&R, looks at the use of YouTube, Instagram, Twitter and Blogs by libraries, and provides links to more detailed papers on Digital Natives, Visitors and Residents, and other insightful viewpoints.
12. “There is no evidence that there is a single
new generation of young students entering
Higher Education and the terms Net Generation
and Digital Native do not capture the processes
of change that are taking place.”
Jones, Chris and Shao, Binhui (2011). The net generation and digital natives: implications for higher education. Higher Education Academy, York.
13. (Basically there are all kinds of factors that
influence how effective your use of technology
is, and your date of birth isn’t that high up the
list. It’s a lot messier than that.)
14. As we all know, being technologically literate is
not the same as being digitally literate.
16. DON’T LET ANYONE
TELL YOU WHAT YOU
CAN AND CAN’T DO
WITH TECHNOLOGY
BASED ON YOUR AGE
17. NOR SHOULD WE MAKE ANY
ASSUMPTIONS ABOUT STAFF,
STUDENTS OR OTHER USERS
BASED ON
THEIR AGE
18. “…the cliche, lazy generational generalizing that Digital
Natives indulges in is an imagining of a seamless present,
wherein THE MERE PRESENCE OF TECHNOLOGY results in
expertise that is untaught, in fact fundamentally unteachable,
and therefore pre-existing, and something to expect from
students of a Certain Age…”
PREACH IT, DONNA LANCLOS
19.
20. “Visitors and Residents is a simple
way of describing the range of
ways individuals can engage with
the Web.”
DAVID WHITE
21. “Visitors and Residents is a simple
way of describing the range of
ways individuals can engage with
the Web.”
DAVID WHITE
VISITORS
Use the internet like a tool to help them
achieve a particular task. They complete the task
and move on, usually leaving very little trace of
themselves.
22. “Visitors and Residents is a simple
way of describing the range of
ways individuals can engage with
the Web.”
DAVID WHITE
VISITORS
RESIDENTS
Use the internet like a tool to help them
achieve a particular task. They complete the task
and move on, usually leaving very little trace of
themselves.
Use the internet more socially, to connect with
people, and share / obtain information about
life and work. There is an identifiable legacy to
their online activity.
23. “It’s a continuum of ‘modes
of engagement’ not two
distinct categories..”
DAVID WHITE
24. “It’s a continuum of ‘modes
of engagement’ not two
distinct categories..”
DAVID WHITE
25. We provide information and help
for people in Visitor mode, via
the website, libguides, and the social
media platforms above
AT THE UNIVERSITY OF YORK
26.
27. For people closer to the Resident mode end of
the continuum we have Facebook and Twitter
28. All of these platforms are flexible.
They’re multi-function according
to our student and staff needs
(and the mode they’re in).
29.
30. OUR YOUTUBE
CHANNEL COULD
BE FOR RESIDENTS,
BUT THE STATS
SUGGEST IT’S
PRIMARILY FOR
VISITORS
854 hours of
views – but
only 15
comments!
32. For actually engaging with
students and staff, twitter is
hard to beat. Its role is
primarily for Residents, but
by embedding it on our
homepage it serves a
function for Visitors too.
TWITTER
33. The tone is like face-to-
face conversation. This
colloquial nature makes it
ideal for getting feedback
which isn’t extreme…
34. The most important thing
to remember about
twitter: it’s a conversation.
How interactive are you?
35. Twitonomy.com will tell
you how interactive
you’re being.
Take a print-screen this
week – then check
back in a month and
see if you can get the
percentages up.
Remember the 1 in 4
rule!
40. INSTAGRAM IS COMING!
It now has 300million active users (more than
Twitter), who spend an average of 21 minutes
a day on the site… That seems pretty
Residential.
(41% of internet using 16 – 24 year
olds are on there)
41. INSTAGRAM IS COMING!
Show off your buildings,
show off your stock.
Show off your
librarians! Provide
behind the
scenes access,
sneak peeks.
It now has 300million active users (more than
Twitter), who spend an average of 21 minutes
a day on the site… That seems pretty
Residential.
(41% of internet using 16 – 24 year
olds are on there)
42.
43.
44.
45. INSTAGRAM IS COMING!
Or host a hashtag contest:
“Share a photo of you in the
library using the hashtag
#librarycontest to win a
prize!”
46.
47. INSTAGRAM IS COMING!
Above all,
make it
specific.
Ideally, each social media
platform your library runs
should perform a
particular role for
your users (even
if there’s some
overlap).
49. (Blogging used to be more Residential, with a thriving blogosphere.
That’s less the case now, but does it matter? I’d argue not. For the
Visitors, it doesn’t even matter if they know it’s a blog or not.
It’s just useful information that’s easy to find.)
5 reasons to set up institutional
55. 3) YOU CAN HAVE LINKS FOR EVERYTHING
A content-pool is not to be
sniffed at. Specific, indexed,
findable information which
you can point people
towards both now and in
the future.
57. 4) THEY’RE REALLY, REALLY EASY TO USE
If you can use Word you
can basically use any of
the major blogging
platforms. Wordpress is
perhaps the nicest to use,
but Blogger won’t put
any ads on your posts.
70. YIKYAK IS A COMPLETELY ANONYMOUS,
LOCATION BASED SOCIAL MEDIA PLATFORM
71. YIKYAK IS A COMPLETELY ANONYMOUS,
LOCATION BASED SOCIAL MEDIA PLATFORM
In many ways YikYak fits the criteria for being a
Visitor’s social media platform, in that users leave
no trace of themselves by definition. But actually,
many YikYak users are Resident for at least some
of the time.
72. YIKYAK IS A COMPLETELY ANONYMOUS,
LOCATION BASED SOCIAL MEDIA PLATFORM
In many ways YikYak fits the criteria for being a
Visitor’s social media platform, in that users leave
no trace of themselves by definition. But actually,
many YikYak users are Resident for at least some
of the time.
And they may be discussing your library!
73. You may well decide
not to interact on
YikYak. But if you’re
an academic library,
it may be at least
worth going on
there, running some
searches, and hearing
what your students
are saying….
75. Fight the urge to make any kind of
assumption about the way people use
technology to find and critically evaluate
information based on
their age.
76. Make time to provide ways for both
Visitors and Residents to interact with
the Library on social media.
77. And if you hear people
using ‘digital natives’
uncritically, tell them
the Digital Native is
as real as the
Easter Bunny…
78. There is a blog-post to accompany
this presentation here.
79. ALL IMAGES COPYRIGHT FREE VIA UNSPLASH, GRATISOGRAPHY AND PIXABAY
Except the V&R Continuum courtesy of David White, and Donna Lanclos copyright of David Tilley
80. MORE ON V&RDonna Lanclos introduced me to the Visitors and Residents
theory as an alternative to thinking about Digital Natives. Here’s
the (fantastic) blogpost from which the quote used in this
presentation was taken. The capitalisation was mine.
David White developed the Visitors and Residents model, with
Alison Le Cornu. Read their paper here, and see Dave’s
introductory website on the topic here. There’s an ongoing
Twitter discussion about Visitors and Residents, which you can
join using the hashtag #vandr.
There’s been much debunking of the Digital Natives myth, but
the particular paper quoted in these slides is available from the
HEA here.
81. MORE SOCIAL MEDIA
The twitter stats packages mentioned were Twitonomy and
Analytics.
My favourite example of how libraries can use Instagram is
the State Library of New South Wales’ account.
There’s more on reasons to set up an institutional blog here.
The popular University of Iowa tumblr is here. 9 reasons to
love the BL’s Mechanical Curator tumblr here.
You can visit YikYak here; the site is not without controversy,
which is detailed in this useful post from JISC.