1. Resources
1.1. LibGuide
1.2. Content Curation Primer
1.3. International Journal of Digital Curation
1.4. Collections
1.4.1. Delicious: Digital Curation
1.4.2. Delicious: Pinterest Clones
1.4.3. Pearltrees: Digital Curation
1.4.4. Scoop.it: Digital Curation for Education
1.5. Posts
1.5.1. Content Curation: Classroom Applications
1.5.2. iPad Apps for Digital Curation
1.5.3. LOC: There are more tools for digital curation than you might think
2. Tools
2.1. Google Spreadsheet
3. Features
3.1. Functions
3.1.1. Aggregation versus selection
3.1.2. Annotation
3.1.2.1. Metadata
3.1.2.2. discoverability
3.1.3. Collaboration
3.1.4. Topic focused community
3.1.5. sharing OR social OR collaborative OR personal / restricted
3.2. Tech features
3.2.1. Media types supported
3.2.2. Bookmarklet
3.2.3. Embeds
3.2.4. Devices
3.2.4.1. Mobile
3.2.4.2. Desktop
4. Uses
4.1. Personal
4.1.1. Academic objects
4.1.1.1. Research articles
4.1.1.2. Data
4.1.1.3. Citations
4.1.1.4. Individuals
4.1.1.5. Tools
4.1.2. Personal
4.1.2.1. Recipes
4.1.2.2. Home repair tutorials
4.2. Education
4.2.1. Libations
4.2.1.1. Assigned topics
4.2.1.2. Presenting
4.2.1.3. Google Jockeys
4.2.1.4. Professor review
4.2.1.5. Gamification: Points, leveling
4.2.2. Collection types
4.2.2.1. Readings
4.2.2.2. Quotations
4.2.2.3. Illustrations
4.2.2.4. Media
4.2.3. Team projects
4.2.3.1. DIY "books"
4.2.3.2. Process timelines
4.2.4. Collections and tips for teaching other students
4.2.5. Tutoring
4.2.6. Designing personal news feeds
4.2.7. Contribute to the wider web
5. Curation
5.1. What is it?
5.1.1. Definitions
5.1.1.1. Free Dictionary (Curatorial)
5.1.1.1.1. One who manages or oversees, as the administrative director of a museum collection or a library.
5.1.1.1.2. Legal guardian
5.1.1.1.3. Overseer
5.1.1.1.4. Cure & Curative
5.1.1.1.5. Care
5.1.1.2. Seattle Public Utilities: About the Habitat Conservation Plan
5.1.1.2.1. The process and procedure for evaluating, storing, documenting and archiving culturally significant material, including artifacts, documents, maps and oral histories.
5.1.1.3. Wiktionary
5.1.1.3.1. The act of curating, of organizing and maintaining a collection of artworks or artifacts; The act of curing or healing; The manual updating of information in a database
5.1.1.4. Your Tech
5.1.1.4.1. "Curation: if you don't have much to say yourself, don't worry: copy and paste what others are saying. This is a new, valuable service all on its own called 'curation'. It's easy to do (but is highly skillful also, got that?)."
5.1.2. Can refer to
5.1.2.1. items
5.1.2.2. objects
5.1.2.3. data
5.1.2.4. collections
5.1.2.5. management
5.1.2.6. husbandry
5.1.2.7. preservation
5.1.3. Digital curation
5.1.3.1. As We May Think. Vannevar Bush
5.1.3.2. Curation Nation
5.1.3.2.1. "It used to be we surfed the web. Now the waves of the web are just too big. Curation is the new magic that makes the web work. Bringing the web back to human scale with human filters you trust and love. A powerful mix of passion and context turns noise back into signal." Steven Rosenbaum
5.1.3.2.2. TEDxGrandRapids - Steve Rosenbaum - Innovate: Curation!
5.1.3.2.3. 7 Days in September
5.1.3.3. Curators Gonna Curate
5.1.3.4. Why Content Curation is Here to Stay
5.1.3.4.1. Search versus selection
5.1.3.4.2. Algorithms versus people
5.1.3.4.3. Creators versus collectors
5.2. About
5.2.1. Curators Code
5.2.2. Curate Camp
5.2.3. The Secret Selfish Side of Social Curation Sites