Shelfster is a new research and writing tool that I learned about from Vicki Davis
earlier this week before trying it out myself this afternoon. The
purpose of Shelfster is to help you bookmark and annotate websites and
documents that you find while researching a topic. You can organize your
findings into Shelfster projects. Within each of your projects you can
create documents by dragging and dropping links and texts into your
documents from your list of saved links. Of course, you can also type in
your documents and edit things that you dragged from your project
library to your documents. Documents can be saved in your online
account, downloaded, and printed.
Shelfster offers an iPad and iPhone app for bookmarking and annotating items to save in your projects. Shelfster also has browser bookmarklets and browser extensions
for bookmarking and annotating materials in Chrome, Firefox, Internet
Explorer, and Opera (sorry Safari fans, it seems Shelfster doesn't
support that yet). You can also use Shelfster as a desktop app on Mac and Windows computers.
Applications for Education
Shelfster has the
potential to be a good service to help students organize the useful
content they find on the Internet. I'm not sure that I'd have students
write an entire research paper within Shelfster yet, but it could
definitely be a good place to construct an outline of a research paper.
Shelfster says that integration with Google Docs is coming in the
future. When that happens then I might have students use Shelfster for
writing an entire research paper that could be easily shared for peer
editing.
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