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What Hasn’t Gone Social?

What Hasn’t Gone Social?

Is there anything that hasn’t gone social? I spent four days in the Willamette Valley of Oregon visiting some wineries and checking in to all of them on FourSquare...because that’s what you do when you’re a geek.

What I wasn’t expecting was for the wineries to have specials on FourSquare. 10% of a purchase at one and at another they donated $1 to a reading program for every FourSquare check in.

Another winery I checked into started following me on FourSquare, found me on Twitter and then tweeted

Churches have Facebook pages

My hot dog guy that I go to before every Mariners game asked me to friend him on Facebook.

The more I look around and see everything going social the more I am trying to figure out if there is any industry left that hasn’t gone social?

Oh….right….education.

Why? Why would a place that is all about community and relationships (words found in almost every mission statement) fight the very idea of creating them, fostering them and using them?

Why are so many schools scared to go social?

How many schools out there have verified their school on FourSquare and started using it with students?

How many schools out there have a Facebook page and actually use it to foster the relationships connected to it?

Twitter?

Google Plus?

Pinerest?

What-ever-the-next-one-will-be-called?

We are quickly getting to a point where if you are not going to connect with people via social networks then you are not getting out information in a very efficient way.

Education needs to stop fighting the social connection revolution and start to find ways to use it to connect their community both within the school and with the larger community.

3 thoughts on “What Hasn’t Gone Social?

    • Author gravatar

      I wholeheartedly agree!

    • Author gravatar

      Hey, Jeff,

      Good questions!

      I’ve been wondering about this for a bit. Is it that there’s now a sharp divide forming between social networks and the education establishment such that the latter distrust the former to do anything constructive in learning?

      Parents, teachers, administrators, policy makers–I don’t get the sense from my experience and what I read that they believe in the efficacy of social networks when it comes to education. They’re more fearful of online bullying, wasting time and the like.

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