College student educators are taught many things in their graduate preparation programs, but what is unfortunately left out is lessons on how to be a professional... DIGITALLY. The following presentation was a collaboration between Josie Ahlquist and myself, original presented at the 2015 Convention of ACPA-College Student Educators International.
http://www.josieahlquist.com
http://paulgordonbrown.com
2. Josie Ahlquist
EdD Candidate at
California Lutheran University
www.josieahlquist.com
josie.renee.ahlquist@gmail.com
@josieahlquist
Paul Gordon Brown
PhD Candidate at
Boston College
www.paulgordonbrown.com
paulgordonbrown@gmail.com
@paulgordonbrown.com
3. Goals for this session.
Recognize current trends in the use of social and digital
technologies.
Understand one’s current digital presence and how to
influence it.
Understand the importance of digital networking.
Know the basics of building an online and offline brand.
Be exposed to social and digital tools and how to use
them to further professional development and reputation.
8. Social Media Realities
Social media is becoming an ever present reality.
Search committees and recruiters will search you online
and look at your social media profiles.
Be aware of what you post online and the effects it can
have on your job search.
Review
10. Your Digital Presence
You have a digital stamp (what you post) and digital
footprints (what others post) whether you want to or not.
Be aware of what is tout there when people search for
you. Be aware of what your social media profiles say
about you.
The best defense is a good offense. Define what you
want others to find rather than allowing them to define it
for you.
Review
12. Build a Brand
Define a digital compass for yourself. What do you want
to be known for?
Write a brief professional bio that sums up who you are.
Make it appropriate for posting online.
Get a good headshot.
Decide what platforms and technologies you want to be
present on and what your unique screen name will be.
Squat the screen name.
Review
19. Your Network
Building a professional network is important. Social
networks can help you solidify and leverage these
relationships.
Develop a personal learning network or environment. A
space where you can draw on professional knowledge
and others.
Integrate free and low cost professional development
into your daily routine.
Review
42. Platforms and Practices
LinkedIn - Get on it! Update it! Connect. Attempt to
achieve 100% profile completeness.
Twitter - Tweet regularly. Know the common hashtags
used. Participate in a Twitter chat. Use it at
conferences.
Facebook - Check your privacy settings. Be aware of
who you friend and what you post. Use the Graph
Search feature.
Review
43. Platforms and Practices
Write a Blog - Consider starting a blog. Read and
comment on other’s blogs.
Create a Professional Portfolio - Archive your professional
work with examples. Upload conference presentations.
Create an online landing page or resume.
Review
57. Josie Ahlquist
EdD Candidate at
California Lutheran University
www.josieahlquist.com
josie.renee.ahlquist@gmail.com
@josieahlquist
Paul Gordon Brown
PhD Candidate at
Boston College
www.paulgordonbrown.com
paulgordonbrown@gmail.com
@paulgordonbrown.com