Thursday 24 May 2012

Training day!

The big day finally arrived and most of the volunteers were able to attend. The morning commenced with obligatory coffee and introductions, and Elmi started off by giving some background to the social reporting concept. After that, aspects such as ethics, use of big screens, twitter questions, twitter hashtags, wifi usage, plus some social reporting do's and dont's were covered. The highlight of the morning was a mock-live tweeting session of a video presentation of Michael Stephens titled Hyperlinked libraries. It seemed to be enjoyed by all and when looking at the tweets afterwards, one could clearly notice the different styles of tweeting present in the room! Most were a bit flustered at first by the speed at which Michael was going, and the brevity of his screenshots, but the end-results was a decent conveying of the gist of Michael's presentation. Another significant moment was the unexpected twitter response of Michael to Siphethile, asking what the hashtag #socrt meant and if we were in Africa!


After lunch, the training turned its focus to the use of video in social reporting. The application of meta-analytics and statistics were also investigated. Videos were made by all.....using  a variety of gadgets: phones, ipads and cameras. Video interviews turned out to be harder than anticipated, as I discovered when trying to do a 2-minute 4-question interview with Elmi. We finally got a presentable take on our fourth attempt!


After the training had finished, most people left but I was still struggling to download 111 Flickr pics until way after 5pm. I had actually used a different camera than the one I normally use when doing walkabout photography while travelling, using the Canon 50D instead of the 5D as the former has a built-in flash. The pictures of the day had turned out better than I had expected, especially considering that the 50D is marginally inferior to the 5D.

Elmi had done a great job in exposing us to the expectations, practicalities as well as demands of social reporting during the day's training. With 13 days left before the conference, I felt more confident than I had felt before the training, yet ready and motivated to practice new skills and hone those which I already possess.


1 comment:

elmi said...

Thank you Louise for these interesting write-ups of your experience... and some real interesting shots:)

You can read the Tweets from this session at http://www.tweetdoc.org/View/45007/Social-Reporting-Training.

Regards, Elmi