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Communicating in the Electronic Age Andrea Adkins 4-H Volunteer & Librarian Washington County Find this and more online at tips4hvols.wordpress.com

Communicating in the Electronic Age

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Communicating in the Electronic Age. Andrea Adkins 4-H Volunteer & Librarian Washington County. Find this and more online at tips4hvols.wordpress.com. Create a Club Calendar. Club Roster. Use a Phone Tree. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Communicating in the

Electronic AgeAndrea Adkins

4-H Volunteer & LibrarianWashington County

Find this and more online at tips4hvols.wordpress.com

Page 2: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Create a Club Calendar

Page 3: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Club Roster

Page 4: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Use a Phone Tree• Advisors call all club officers (P, VP, S, T) then

each officer calls a set number of other members. Good for emergencies.

• You can also use a calling committee: each person is responsible for calling a set amount of other members. Good for reminders about meetings & other club/county events.

Page 5: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Create an Email Group

Page 6: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

ALWAYS GET YOUR EXTENSION

EDUCATOR’S PERMISSION BEFORE

CREATING A FACEBOOK GROUP

Page 7: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

How to create and a "Secret Group" on Facebook

Sign into your Facebook account.

If you do not have a Facebook account, create one and learn how to use it. To learn how, look at the handout

“Jump into Facebook".

Page 8: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Create a Group

First, click on "Create Group..."

Page 9: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Create a Group cont.

Type in your club’s name

For privacy, always choose a “secret” group

Enter the name of a club member/parent/advisor/extension educator.

Click “Create”

Page 10: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Create a Group cont.

Choose an icon Then click “Okay”

Page 11: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Create a Group cont.

Success! You have created a group. Now, who and how do you add people to your group?

Page 12: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Who Do I Add and How?

First add your 4-H Extension Educator and make them an administrator. You must be “friends” with them first.

Click on the settings button and choose “Make Admin”

Click “Make Admin”

Click “Add People”

Type their name in the box

Click “Add”

Page 13: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Who Do I Add and How? Cont.

Next add advisors, parents, and members over age 13. You can do this by typing their name in the box.

Page 14: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Group Settings

Click on the “Settings” icon and choose “Edit Group Settings”

Page 15: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Group Settings cont.

These are the best settings for creating a group for your club.Make sure to click “Save” before leaving the page.

“Secret” Group

This allows others to add appropriate people to the group without you being friends with them, but you have to approve before they are added.

Allows members to post to group.

Gives administrators total control over what is posted.

Page 16: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Approving Posts

This shows that you have posts that need approved. Click on it to see posts.

Page 17: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Approving Posts cont.

Here are three pending posts. Choose the checkmark to approve. The X to delete or the minus to delete and ban. Hopefully there is never a

need to delete and ban but if there is, confer with your Extension Educator first. See the slide “Tips for Moderating Posts”.

Page 18: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Approving Posts cont.

This is what is looks like after you approve a post. Your Extension Educator is already an administrator whose posts do not need approved. I would also have

another advisor be an administrator as well.

Page 19: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Using Group Features

There are five sections to a group page: Wall, About, Events, Photos, and Files.

Page 20: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Using Group Features cont.

Besides writing posts you can add photos, files, and ask questions.

The question/poll tool is a good

way to brainstorm and

get feedback from the club

after an speaker or activity.

Page 21: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Using Group Features cont.

When you click on the “About” tab you can see all members of a “Secret” Group. Click on “Add a Description” to provide more information about the group.

From here you can adjust the setting for each person in the group.The message feature will send a private message to everyone in the group.

You can also add people to the group from this screen.

Page 22: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Using Group Features cont.

Click here to create an event.

Click here to change

event settings.

Change calendar settings for events here.

Remember to click “Save”.

Page 23: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Using Group Features cont.

Click to upload photos or videos. Make sure to follow rules on photography & video as laid out in Ohio 4-H Guidelines for Social Media.

Page 24: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Using Group Features cont.

The “Files” feature is a great tool to use to create or upload documents for your club. For example, you could upload your county’s Jr. Fair Guide, Camp

Registration form, club contacts list, meeting minutes, etc.

Page 25: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Using Group Features cont.

Upload files here. Remember to “Save”.

You can create a document here. Type first,then click “Create Doc”.

Page 26: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Tips for Moderating Posts

• From a social media moderator’s point of view it would be better to delete the post and then remove the person from the group if it continues. Fortunately, making it so all posts must be approved before being posted will help this. If there is a repeat offender, please talk to them and explain why their post was

not approved so they will hopefully not repeat it in the future.

• Go with your gut, if you feel something should not be posted, error on the side of caution and do not approve the post.

• If you have questions or problems always contact your 4-H Extension Educator.

Page 27: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Tips for Communication• Create a calendar for the club year and a roster with contact information for each member. Give these to your 4-H Club families as early in the year as possible.

•One advisor in the club should be responsible for sending out electronic reminders and other communications to the 4-H Club families.

• Do not make facebook or another form of Social Media the only way you contact your 4-H club families.

• Create a group in your email account to make it easy to communicate. Ask for email addresses for both parents and children for this group. If anyone does not use email, contact them by phone.

• If you live in an area without high speed Internet or have many families who do not use technology regularly, make phone calls.

• It’s helpful to type up an email and send it then copy the email and post it on Facebook.

• Texting reminders is also a good way to send reminders to specific people. It is possible to send group texts as well.

Page 28: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

ResourcesOhio Guidelines for Social Networking and Web Sites http://www.ohio4h.org/sites/drupal-ohio4h.web/files/Ohio%204-H%20Guidelines%20for%20Social%20Networking.pdf

National 4-H Social Media Guidelineshttp://www.ohio4h.org/sites/drupal-ohio4h.web/files/4-H%20Social%20Media%20Best%20Practices%20Guide.pdf

These are helpful but have not been updated in a year or two and in some ways are out of date. For example, the “secret” group instead of a “closed” group gets rid of many of the safety and privacy issues in using a facebook group for your club. Twitter is the same, the settings are now there to make all posts invisible and your name unsearchable unless you have been added as a follower by an administrator.

Social Media Training - Webinar Serieshttp://www.4-h.org/get-involved/social-media/training/

This is more for Extension Educators but you may glean some useful information.Remember, this might not be updated as soon as things change on the social media sites, so you must keep up for yourself.

Page 29: Communicating  in the  Electronic Age

Contact Information

Andrea Adkins4-H Volunteer, Washington County

OLC Certified Public Librarian

Email: [email protected]: Andrea Beth

Twitter: @abradkinsLinkedIn: Andrea Adkins

Find PowerPoint and other resources here: tips4hvols.wordpress.com