Thinking about social networks and digital online tools allows us to question how students use them. It is also interesting to examine the popularity of social networks and digital online tools. A survey was conducted encasing the result of 29 students. 22 of the 29 students study economic sciences and 7 students study educational sciences.
Approximately one student out of four uses digital tools to organize their daily life or studies. Furthermore the students were asked to specify which tools they were using, the name and how it worked as well as why they use it. The results are mixed due to the fact that not all students use the same Apps. Studies showed that the most frequently used Apps were Outlook and Google Docs.
18 students used digital online tools to work together with colleagues on projects and documents. During the collaboration the majority of students used Dropbox, Share Point and Trello. The study was specifically interested in learning about digital online tools/apps that are known for collaborative learning and working. 12 students replied to the question, e.g. saying: “Cloud”, “simplification of communication” and “Trello”. Furthermore, we asked the students if they knew about certain tools: Evernote, Trello, Realtime Board, Onenote, Mindmaster, WiseMap, WordPress, Mediawiki, Google Docs, Dropbox, Seafile, Etherpad, Slack, Socrative, SurveyMonkey and Mind24.
Dropbox has the highest recognition rate, 11 students reported that they knew of it. WordPress and Etherpad have the second highest recognition rate. Both were recognized by 5 students. 2 students knew Evernote and Onenote, however, only one student recognized MindMaster. 6 people admitted to use Dropbox, 3 people used WordPress. Trello, Google Docs, Seafile and Etherpad are each known by only one person.
We also wanted to know of students have accounts on social networks like Facebook, Xing and so on. And we would like to know for which purpose they use it.
At the end, 9 students answered on the purpose of networks in a general sense. Fewer students answered on the purpose of network usage. Some of the responses were: “LinkedIn: for the job, because I’m recruiting”, “Facebook rather in private, Xing rather work-related” and “Facebook mostly in private.”