Home - Office and Services - Information Technology - Information Technology News
Information Technology News

Latest Posts

Can Colgate ban Yik Yak?

By Ellen Holm on February 19, 2015

Like any website or Internet-based service, Colgate could use firewalls to block users of our network from accessing Yik Yak. Decisions to block access to any service or website are made extremely carefully – balancing security needs with the protection of privacy and freedom in education. Additionally, blocking Yik Yak would not preclude individuals from accessing and posting to Yik Yak through other means.

Several colleges have blocked Yik Yak from their networks, including Utica College and Augustana College, but posts continue. Yik Yak requires a mobile device with an Internet connection and presence within a geographic area. When Yik Yak does not have a successful wifi connection, it will automatically flip to use the mobile device’s cellular signal to ‘yak’ within an area.  In other words, anyone in the area with an active mobile Internet connection can post to Yik Yak without using our wifi. ‘Yakkers’ need not even be Colgate students, staff or faculty. For these reasons, even when other colleges have blocked Yik Yak, the posts have continued with individuals ‘yakking’ through the cellular network.

If you see a post that threatens physical violence on Yik Yak or through other online activity, please preserve the information through a screen capture of the post and note the time you viewed the post. For e-mail, please preserve the e-mail. To report a threat, please call Campus Safety through the emergency line (x7911) or through the routine line (x7333).

 


edsocialmedia.com

By mark hine on July 19, 2013

http://www.edsocialmedia.com/ is a portal site dedicated to exploring the role of social media in education. Through a series of bootcamps and events they explore policy, implementations, trials and tribulations,  and how to measure and control the adverse aspects that come with social media.


Social Media in Education: The Power of Facebook

By mark hine on July 19, 2013

Social Media in Education: The Power of Facebook is an amusing article from the perspective of a primary educator but still relevant to higher ed. Author Heather Wolpert-Gawron’s musings draw attention to the power of social media as an awareness, program and campaign tool.

Read more at: http://www.edutopia.org/social-media-education-examples-facebook


Teaching, Learning, and Sharing: How Today’s Higher Education Faculty Use Social Media

By mark hine on July 19, 2013

This thought provoking article reports on the pervasiveness of social media, surveying the various services, reporting on usage and highlighting the professional and curricular uses of social media. Sponsored by Pearson.

Read more at: http://www.eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/search/detailmini.jsp?_nfpb=true&_&ERICExtSearch_SearchValue_0=ED535130&ERICExtSearch_SearchType_0=no&accno=ED535130


Using Flickr for Media Rich Classes

By mark hine on July 19, 2013

Flickr is a photo aggregating and organizing service. Flickr also has the capability to support discussion groups. William Allen’s article, Using Flickr for Media Rich Classes, discusses how he leverages discussion groups around Art History content to encourage conversations about the works they study. He also discusses the various privacy options available and how Flickr is superior in this regard to learning management systems. Allen notes, “When teaching and learning revolve around images, the way that a learning management system buries images as a discussion develops hinders the image flow so crucial to image-based teaching.”

Read more at: http://www.educause.edu/ero/article/using-flickr-media-rich-classes