Wednesday 8 October 2014

Evaluating LinkedIn as a tool for education



TAMK Participatory Learning & Teaching - Assignment: Networking with LinkedIn

With over 300 million users (40% of whom check in daily) in over 200 countries, LinkedIn is one of the social networking success stories. Unlike Facebook or Twitter, however, LinkedIn sets its stall out as a venue for career-related networking, rather than socializing in general. 




In the digital age, educators are keen to harness the powers of this phenomenon for their own ends. But before doing so, they must ask themselves two questions: What is it good for? And, what are the drawbacks? Let’s first have a look at the upsides:

Networking

The value of networking is clear for all to see, especially in education at a vocational level and higher where students will be searching for work practice placements and potential future employment. Knowing the right people helps.

The old models of networking are not only disappearing but can feel painfully cumbersome to maintain. At its most basic level, LinkedIn allows students and educators to connect and keep in touch. It’s a tool with a purpose and it is able to perform its purpose well when used correctly.

Internationality

Using LinkedIn can help educators to bridge otherwise significant distance problems with foreign partners. Whilst there’s little excuse for not visiting your colleagues or counterparts in your own town, the financial limitations of doing so internationally, as well as time and energy costs, mean that LinkedIn is a useful tool in meeting that challenge.

Unknown possibilities

One of the truly useful aspects of LinkedIn for students is that they can gain knowledge of career paths that they may never have thought of before. Through linking with new people in different sectors and putting themselves out there, they can find unexpected opportunities.

Online CV

The most basic use of LinkedIn is as an online CV. Users are able to include information in their profiles about skills, competences, work experience, education, projects and aspirations for the future. Importantly for a CV, it’s simple to keep up to date. Creating a portfolio is a necessity for most students and LinkedIn not only helps you do this, but also provides eyeballs for looking at it.

What are the downsides of using LinkedIn?

Despite the impressive growth of the site, there exists polarizing opinions about its worth. Let’s have a look at some of the key drawbacks in using LinkedIn for education.

Procrastination

A survey conducted by Salary.com found that for all the reasons people waste time at work (let’s annex study onto this, too), by far the biggest culprit was social networking, including LinkedIn. This raises the question of why people are time wasting in the first place. That can be due to many factors, though lack of motivation would seem to cover a lot of those.  

Arguably, social networks may be a symptom rather than a cause of time wasting, but one thing is for sure, they don’t help.

Conformity

People are generally at best unmoved by mass-produced online profiles and at worst mistrustful of them. For students looking to make an impression on prospective study or workplaces, being able to point to a LinkedIn profile is unlikely to get anyone’s pulse racing. Never underestimate the worth of standing out.

Privacy

Putting your personal information into the hands of a business means you lose control of it. The Terms of Service for LinkedIn state that they have unlimited license to sell user information to anyone. Below is a quote from their website:

…you grant LinkedIn a nonexclusive, irrevocable, worldwide, perpetual, unlimited, assignable, sublicenseable, fully paid up and royalty-free right to … use and commercialize, in any way now known or in the future discovered, any information you provide, directly or indirectly to LinkedIn … without any further consent, notice and/or compensation to you or to any third parties.

The old adage comes to mind, ‘If you are using something for free on the internet, you are the product.’

Would we suggest other educational tools if they could potentially endanger the privacy rights of the students?

Exclusivity

Whilst it may seem that the level of participation in online networking among young people is reaching saturation point, it will simply never be the case that every student or educator will be happy to sign up. 

This results in an imbalanced playing field, where most people are happy to go along with the service and some, for better or worse reasons, are not. Those students left behind are potentially disadvantaged for it.

Summary

LinkedIn, and any similar online networking tool, is optimally used as a supplement for real world networking and certainly not as a complete substitute. 

The world of education has not yet entirely shifted into the cyberspace and it’s not going to any time soon. People value meeting in person and the danger is that if there is a backlash against social networking, some people entering the workforce will lack the social skills needed for real world interactions. 

To lean on the internet as the key medium for education is to employ a rather wobbly crutch.

Of course, students themselves mostly opt into studies through their own volition and if it’s clear from the start that the course involves participation in a social networking site, then that’s all fair and well. If, however, it isn’t presented front and centre then a certain amount of flexibility has to be in place to accommodate those students unwilling to sign up.

Sources

ColourMyLearning.com

Forbes

Salary.com

The Tech Republic

LinkedIn statistics

LinkedIn Terms of Service

2 comments:

  1. Thank you for this nice summary!

    I would just like to add a comment on a particular practice of LinkedIn that I found extremely annoying, that is LinkedIn (repeatedly) asking for your e-mail password. That I consider (close-to) phishing, as it is not stated clear enough what it is going to use this unlimited access to your e-mail account for. I just wonder, how sensible people with more then zero IT knowledge can agree to do this!

    I consider this as just one example of how ill-considered hotheaded social networking attempts can drive you into situations where the future of your whole social network run on more conventional instruments (like e-mail) is at mercy of a third party.

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    Replies
    1. Hi Gergo, thanks for the comment.

      The suspicious password "phishing" from LinkedIn doesn't surprise me. I haven't signed up, so I'm not familiar with this specific instance, but it looks about par for the course.

      I think you are right that there's a strong obligation to consider unknown implications of signing up to social networking, so people really should do their homework before joining anything. Ignorance is no excuse.

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