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Scoop.it: Curate Engaging Magazines & Feed your Web Presence. Posted on Monday, August 19th, 2013 by Uri Halevi Scoop.it allows you to cut through the noise on social media and share ideas that matter through beautiful topic pages.

Scoop.it: Curate Engaging Magazines & Feed your Web Presence

It’s All About Your Web Presence! Scoop.it is a great tool that is aimed to help the marketers, the consultants, and the entrepreneurs increase their visibility online. It enables professionals to share important ideas with the right audiences giving them an opportunity to create and maintain a meaningful Web presence, a crucial component to the success of their business and career. On it you can collect relevant content and add your insight to attract an avid audience. Designed for the Social Media Era… Storify in Education: Curate useful contentThe Education Hub. Storify is a content curation tool that has gained a lot of attention.

Storify in Education: Curate useful contentThe Education Hub

Many use it to curate and share content about different topics. Please feel free to visit the content curation (opens in a new window) post to learn more about the topic. Although Storify started with a limited feature set, it quickly expanded into a rich and very useful tool. Storify allows you to easily follow stories created by others, or better, allows you to create your own stories quite easily. Similar to Scoop.it, Storify not only allows you to curate content, it also allows you to write your own narrative, allowing you to comment and make sense of what contents you have pulled together. Within Storify, you can make use and pull content together from Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Flickr, Tumblr, Instagram, RSS Feeds and more. In Education Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast) A.Hariri Doctoral student at Warwick Manufacturing Group, The University of Warwick. CURATE AWARD. Curation Tools. Cool Tools to Curate Content.

Storify in Education: Curate useful contentThe Education Hub. Curate me. Aggregate, Curate and Create Your Own Textbook. One of the latest buzz words in social media is curation.

Aggregate, Curate and Create Your Own Textbook

Why To Collaborate and Curate Content With Your Students. What do we do with all this great education content after we find it?

Why To Collaborate and Curate Content With Your Students

Be an education content curator! What is your daily internet workflow? The age of getting into work early, finishing up your first cup of coffee and flicking through your favorite local and national publications is quickly expiring. Whether it be, sites that are tabbed in your browser's favorites, an RSS news feed or a social media outlet, it seems that we spend at least some piece of our day cruising through web based media sources. Browsing content can be powerful and overwhelming all at the same time. Teaching Students to Become Curators of Ideas: The Curation Project. I know a lot of people view curation as a buzz word devoid of meaning, but I like the metaphor!

Teaching Students to Become Curators of Ideas: The Curation Project

I think it beautifully captures the process we need to go through to best make sense of the vast amount of information available on the web. Of course, it doesn’t help that a lot of people use the word curation to describe activities that don’t live up to the metaphor. And that takes away from its power. Storify · Don't get lost in the noise. Discover the voices worth sharing. High-Stakes Standardized Testing in K-12 Education · EdTechSandyK.

Shine on the web. Mobile Learning in PK-16 & Beyond... Pinterest / Home. Teaching The Hunger Games. CHNL. Kris McGlaun. Paper.li Education and Technology. Books. EduClipper. LiveBinders. Symbaloo. Copyright and More. The 50+ Best Ways to Curate and Share Your Favorite Social Media and News Content. There’s so much information online just begging to be curated: news, social media, images, video, websites… the list goes on.

The 50+ Best Ways to Curate and Share Your Favorite Social Media and News Content

Reading great content from my favorite blogs and websites is one of my favorite down-time activities. It’s also an important part of my job as an IT Director because I need to stay on top of the latest trends, announcements and tech news. Just a few years ago, the tools I used to use for reading and consuming content wereGoogle Reader, StumbleUpon, Digg, Delicious… you know all the big names. Also read: The top 100 Twitter Tools of 2012 (Categorized). More recently I’ve discovered some great new tools to read and share my favorite content which I’ve included here in this list.

Faveous - The place for everything you like. Flipboard – Your social magazine. Storify - Building the story layer above social networks. Utopic - Visual social bookmarking. Alltop - All the top stories. This post is sourced from this LINK. Organize, Curate, and Share Your Online Resources. The Culture of Curating and The Curating of Culture(s) “Once considered a mere caretaker for collections, the curator is now widely viewed as a globally connected auteur.

The Culture of Curating and The Curating of Culture(s)

Over the last twenty-five years, as international group exhibitions and biennials became the dominant mode of presenting contemporary art to the public, curatorship began to be perceived as a constellation of creative activities not unlike artistic praxis. The curator went from being a behind-the-scenes organizer and selector to a visible, centrally important cultural producer. In The Culture of Curating and the Curating of Culture(s), Paul O’Neill examines the emergence of independent curatorship and the discourse that helped to establish it. O’Neill describes how, by the 1980s, curated group exhibitions--large-scale, temporary projects with artworks cast as illustrative fragments--came to be understood as the creative work of curator-auteurs.