social @ edu

Exploring strategies for social media in higher education

Archive for the tag “youtube”

YouTube for Higher Education: Worth a Million Words?

In June, Shannon wrote a great entry about the utilization of pictures in social media.  I agree with her title, “Worth A Thousand Words,” because pictures have so much clout on social media.  Pinterest’s meteoric rise is a great example of that.  Facebook’s formula that helps define what you see in your Newsfeed, called Edgerank, favors images in posts.  This could be why that picture of your friend’s home-cooked meal from last night stays in your view longer than the purely text status your cousin posted an hour ago.  Images are critical to staying in the spotlight on social media.

If a picture is worth 1,000 words, what’s the value of a video?  1,000,000 words?  In a 2009 study conducted by Intelligent Television with the cooperation of New York University called “Video Use and Higher Education: Options for the Future,” 57 faculty and librarians from 20 institutions were interviewed about their thoughts on the subject.  Regarding their anticipated use of video in the future, 40% said they “will use more online video” and 43% said they “will be using more video overall.”  I’d be interested to know if there’s a follow up study planned, especially since Blackboard, a leading learning management system in higher ed, recently partnered with NBC Learn to bring video content into the platform.

How about videos, higher education, and social media?  Although there are many great video channels with social elements out there, the one that comes to mind first for me is YouTube (possibly because YouTube is 2nd largest search engine in the world).  Well, there’s a lot going on here.  For starters, YouTube hosts “YouTube Edu,” a growing body of high quality videos from educational partners around the world.  There’s even a dedicated higher education channel, pictured below.

YouTube for Higher Education channel

A screenshot of YouTube’s Higher Education channel.

Perhaps even more intriguing is an article in the Chronicle by the President of Macalester College, titled “What I Learned From YouTube.”  In it, the President, who refers to himself as “comfortably old-fashioned when it comes to information technology,” documents his experience with a video of himself as President gone viral on YouTube.  He tells the story of how parents, alumni, fellow college presidents and more from all over the world saw his video and sent him “several hundred” email messages.  Though he says it’s been hard to measure the full impact of the visibility gained from all of the video views, he notes that positive responses from annual fund solicitations went up after the video debuted.  Intriguing indeed.

How are you getting involved with videos in higher education?  Is online video a priority at your university?  Share your examples and ideas in the Comments, and let’s talk YouTube for higher education.

By Kevin

Awesome Article Alert: “Global Social Media Check-Up 2012″

If you’re into stats on social media utilization and SlideShare, hang on to your hat because this one is right up your alley.  Burson-Marsteller, a leading global public relations and communications firm, recently released their “Global Social Media Check-Up 2012” and published it to SlideShare.  You can click through pretty quickly, pick up some of the stunning stats about the growth of social networks, and learn how major international organizations are harnessing its power in their work.  Here are just a few points that I particularly enjoyed:

  • Twitter boasts 340 million tweets per day
  • 72 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube every minute
  • The average Facebook page for global companies has increased in community size by 275% since 2010
  • Twitter is the most popular social network among global companies
  • Global companies have multiple accounts on networks to do different things like target geographic regions, target audiences for products, and recruit top talent

In case you missed the link, here is Burson-Marsteller’s “Global Social Media Check-Up 2012″ on SlideShare.  I know there are similar stats compiled out there for higher ed.  Do you have a resource that shows a “Higher Ed Check-Up 2012″ you can share?  Pass it along in a comment!

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