After following several tweets about the benefits of Diigo to educators, I made the shift to Diigo. Making the shift was easy since Diigo created an import of all my bookmarks from Delicious to Diigo. Losing three years worth of bookmarks would have been a deal breaker. By preparing this lesson, I learned a lot about Diigo! The tag line for Diigo is Research, Share, Collaborate ~ My Library, My Network, My Groups.
Research – Diigo is an excellent research tool to highlight, organize, bookmark, annotate, search and access information we find on the internet. What’s really cool is you can add sticky notes, highlight information and annotate with shapes, arrows and text and all this stays on the page when you revisit. You can obviously bookmark a page, but you can also choose to upload or capture a screen snapshot into your library. I believe that tags are the powerhouse of a good social bookmarking system. Of the 500+ bookmarks I have, I have them divided into over 70 different categories or tags. I can search by the tags (or multiple tags) when I’m trying to find an article of interest. For example, I teach web design once a year. I have an awesome site that shares the history of the internet that I use every year. I also learned I could create lists of information that can be organized, moved and sorted. From this list, a user can generate a report. This report can then be played like a slideshow in a tool Diigo created called Webslide…very cool!
Share – A goal for me this year was to continually look for ways to expand and enhance my Personal Learning Network. Diigo is another way to do this. I can share or not share…it’s up to me. All the information in My Library up to this point has been from the internet – so why not? Annotations and things I add would enhance my bookmarks. I could benefit and learn if others commented on them. I can share through email, groups, RSS feeds, twitter and cool widgets like the ones I added this week to the side of the blog. In My Network, I can build different groups that share varied interests consisting of different tags and bookmarks. We can communicate through Diigo and learn from one another. There is also a powerful feature where you create an “annotated link” that you can share with a friend or colleague that is not a current Diigo user.
Collaborate – Diigo groups are great for collaborative/group research. Each member can share their annotated findings with the group. All the information is together in one central repository. It is the Google Apps of web research and information sharing. Comments can be made on the pages or in a thread. Members can receive emails when new items are added to the group. Members can “Like” an item in a Facebook like fashion. As every group member contributes, the group grows and learns. I am currently setting up my WestonkaTILT group. I’m hoping Diigo will be a powerful central hub built around our groups’ mission of embedding 21st century skills and personalizing learning for our students!
[caption id="attachment_124" align="aligncenter" width="422" caption="My Diigo Bookmarks & Tags"]
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