Tag Archives: Google

Optimization for Education?

Googlebot from page 5

SEO or search engine optimization is increasingly on my radar these days. Almost daily, I see posts about it on sites like Mashable and tweets about it in my various Twitter streams. It wasn’t that long ago that I was still trying to learn and remember what the acronym stood for but over the past few months I have come to see how valuable SEO can be.

For those of you who are new to this term, search engine optimization refers to “the active practice of optimizing a web site by improving internal and external aspects in order to increase the traffic the site receives from search engines” as defined by SEOmoz. This means that you examine your website to ensure that there is consistency in your naming practices, that your links are updated and active, that your content is original and new, and that you have social media sharing tools embedded on every page.

Of course, there are a number of other factors that affect SEO, many of which I am still learning. Luckily, there are a lot of helpful resources on the web to find out how SEO works. For example, I attended a great webinar by Kuno Creative titled “Inbound Marketing: The New SEO Facts, Figures, and Data” which helped clarify the connection between inbound marketing (if you’re new to this term, check out this great infographic) and SEO. Through that webinar, I was able to find out about updates to Google’s search algorithm and how it rewards sites for providing good content that people want to share across the web. I also learned more about the importance of having numerous keywords appear in search engine results that will drive traffic to your site. Other resources, like SEOmoz’s extensive “Beginner’s Guide to SEO” and Google’s “Search Engine Optimization Starter Guide” have also been invaluable in my journey to understand SEO and its effect on my websites.

Yet, the more I learn about SEO, the more I begin to wonder about the implications of SEO for educators and educational organizations or nonprofits. Many of these groups have few employees and little funding and most of the educators I know dedicate much, if not all, of their time to designing lesson plans and preparing innovative and engaging projects for their students. All of which leaves little time to learn about SEO and apply the related practices to their company websites or personal blogs. Meanwhile, large companies hire full-time “search engine optimizers” or companies like Hubspot to help them with this work.

Does this difference in SEO resources and management capacity matter? Do educators, schools, and educational organizations need to be concerned with SEO? A few months ago, I would have said no – SEO is something that only businesses and companies trying to sell products deal with and need to worry over. Now, I’m not so sure. As I prepare to launch my own new website for early childhood educators to learn about using technology to create global learning experiences, I’m conscious of the fact that I would like my site to be easily found in search engines. I want educators to be able to find the free resources and tools I have collected without having to search ten pages of Google results before stumbling upon the site.

Watching the analytics for this blog, I can see how much traffic search engines can bring to a site and I want other educational websites and blogs to be accessible and easily found by families, teachers, and administrators who want to learn about educational issues. So, I’m left wondering about the importance of SEO for education and about whether there is a way to make information about SEO more accessible and understandable for educators and their related organizations. I want to optimize education so that it is a topic that has a fighting chance at being ranked in search results. I think educators easily have the “fresh” content that Google is looking for, I’m just not sure if they are always aware of how that content has to be coded and marketed to be optimized for search results.

Some Tech Goals for 2012

Last week, I wrote some reflections on 2011 and after looking back on the past year, I decided it would be good to also think about 2012 and some of the tech goals I hope to accomplish.

The first one is to keep up with this blog and to start adding more pictures to my posts! I think I got a good start with this goal in my last post. 🙂

I want to learn more about coding this year. I was excited to discover the free Javascript coding lessons at Codeacademy. I recently finished their “Getting Started with Programming” course and until they release new lessons, I plan to start exploring Ruby.

Another tool I’ve been exploring and want to begin using more frequently is Google Reader. Now that I’m posting here and reading so many new blogs, I realized I needed a way to easily organize them and stay up-to-date on new posts. I’m still trying to decide how I want to arrange my folders and I also hope to look into creating “bundles” and see how they might be valuable for sharing blog resources.

After recently receiving an invite, I just started to poke around on Pinterest and I would like to explore the site more. I want to think more deeply about how I can use the site in a meaningful and productive way to organize and share resources with other educators. I currently only have 18 pins on 6 boards but as I search around the site, I’m beginning to find some really great resources from other users. I think there are some really exciting possibilities for sharing with the site, especially since you can allow other users to add pins to your boards. I could see this turning a board like “Great #ECE Blogs” into a goldmine.

Wikis are also on my list of goals for 2012 because I plan to create at least one wiki for my master’s program this year for a weekend course I’m teaching in the spring on Technology as a Global Learning Tool. I have only used wikis intermittently over the past few years and I want to grow more comfortable with using and designing them so that the participants of the course can co-create one with me. I hope it will serve as an ongoing resource and community space for us to think about #globaled, #ICT4D, #development, #edtech and ways to use technology in meaningful ways in the U.S. and abroad.

One other fairly new tool/site that is on my list is Google+. I have played around on the site, creating my own page and a page for my master’s program but I haven’t seen a lot of interaction there and honestly have struggled to find time to be active there as well as all of the other networks I participate in and sites I run. I hope to continue exploring Google+ in 2012 and testing out some more of the resources the site offers, like Hangouts, as well as finding ways to use Pages for inbound marketing.

Finally, an ongoing goal of mine is to stay active in my existing social media networks and in close communication with my PLN so that together, we can continue learning and teaching about issues in (early childhood) education, resources for teachers, ideas for using social media and new technologies, and ways to connect people around the globe!