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Twitter to Teach: Generating
self-reflective practices with
        microblogging
     Twitter as a data source




                     2010
Twitter to Teach: Generating
self-reflective practices with
        microblogging
     Twitter as a data source




                     2010
Wider Context




 •      126 million – The number of blogs on the Internet (as tracked by BlogPulse)

 •      84% – Percent of social network sites with more women than men.

 •      27.3 million – Number of tweets on Twitter per day (November, 2009)

 •      57% – Percentage of Twitter’s user base located in the United States.

 •      4.25 million – People following @aplusk (Ashton Kutcher, Twitter’s most followed user).

 •      350 million – People on Facebook.

 •      50% – Percentage of Facebook users that log in every day.

 •      500,000 – The number of active Facebook applications.


© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO    13 November 2007                      2
Wider Context




 •      126 million – The number of blogs on the Internet (as tracked by BlogPulse)

 •      84% – Percent of social network sites with more women than men.

 •      27.3 million – Number of tweets on Twitter per day (November, 2009)

 •      57% – Percentage of Twitter’s user base located in the United States.

 •      4.25 million – People following @aplusk (Ashton Kutcher, Twitter’s most followed user).

 •      350 million – People on Facebook.

 •      50% – Percentage of Facebook users that log in every day.

 •      500,000 – The number of active Facebook applications.


© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO    13 November 2007                      2
•“In a profession as challenging as teaching, honest self-reflection is key.
          That means that we must regularly examine what has worked and what
          hasn't in the classroom, despite how painful it can sometimes be to look in
          the mirror.” (Lewis http://k6educators.about.com/od/professionaldevelopment/a/self_reflection.htm)
       • “The capacity to reflect on one’s sense of self is an important component of
         self-awareness.” (Johnson et al, 2002)
       • “Students should develop self-reflection skills and appropriate views about
         knowledge and learning, both for their own sake and because these skills
         and views may be related to improvements in conceptual
         understanding.” (May & Etkina, 2002)
       • “...students’ metacognitive (ie self) awareness could enhance their self-
         control” (Zimmerman, 2002, p. 65)
       • “teachers must be able to construct pedagogical practices that have
         relevance and meaning to students’ social and cultural realities” (Howard,
         2003, p. 195)



© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO           13 November 2007                            3
Self-reflection as a focus
       •“In a profession as challenging as teaching, honest self-reflection is key.
          That means that we must regularly examine what has worked and what
          hasn't in the classroom, despite how painful it can sometimes be to look in
          the mirror.” (Lewis http://k6educators.about.com/od/professionaldevelopment/a/self_reflection.htm)
       • “The capacity to reflect on one’s sense of self is an important component of
         self-awareness.” (Johnson et al, 2002)
       • “Students should develop self-reflection skills and appropriate views about
         knowledge and learning, both for their own sake and because these skills
         and views may be related to improvements in conceptual
         understanding.” (May & Etkina, 2002)
       • “...students’ metacognitive (ie self) awareness could enhance their self-
         control” (Zimmerman, 2002, p. 65)
       • “teachers must be able to construct pedagogical practices that have
         relevance and meaning to students’ social and cultural realities” (Howard,
         2003, p. 195)



© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO            13 November 2007                           3
Background

  • Microblogging - in Twitter, a ‘tweet’ is 140 characters
  • Negative press:
     1. McFedries (2007): “most people just don’t see the point, and others dismiss it as a massive
     time-suck… [because] of the unremitting triviality of most people’s updates”.
     2. Lyons (2009) considers it “a playground for imbeciles, skeevy marketers, D-list celebrity half-
     wits, and pathetic attention seekers”.

  • Educational uses:
     (a) Holotescu and Grosseck (2009): examined how participants in a tertiary course wrote public
     messages, followed and contributed to discussions, monitored feeds, and continued to
     collaborate and converse when course ended. This was seen as a “very important advantage”,
     as was the “ambient awareness” of communicating in short posts.

     (b) Aspden and Thorpe (2009): used Twitter to understand student learning spaces: used
     phones to answer ‘Where do you learn?’

     (c) Wishart (2009): used PDAs with initial teacher education students who “are expected to
     acquire, decipher, and understand a wealth of information, both pedagogical and practical” (p.
     266) as they navigate between university courses and practicum (school placement)
     experiences.



© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO   13 November 2007                       4
Background

  • Microblogging - in Twitter, a ‘tweet’ is 140 characters
  • Negative press:
     1. McFedries (2007): “most people just don’t see the point, and others dismiss it as a massive
     time-suck… [because] of the unremitting triviality of most people’s updates”.
     2. Lyons (2009) considers it “a playground for imbeciles, skeevy marketers, D-list celebrity half-
     wits, and pathetic attention seekers”.

  • Educational uses:
     (a) Holotescu and Grosseck (2009): examined how participants in a tertiary course wrote public
     messages, followed and contributed to discussions, monitored feeds, and continued to
     collaborate and converse when course ended. This was seen as a “very important advantage”,
     as was the “ambient awareness” of communicating in short posts.

     (b) Aspden and Thorpe (2009): used Twitter to understand student learning spaces: used
     phones to answer ‘Where do you learn?’

     (c) Wishart (2009): used PDAs with initial teacher education students who “are expected to
     acquire, decipher, and understand a wealth of information, both pedagogical and practical” (p.
     266) as they navigate between university courses and practicum (school placement)
     experiences.



© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO   13 November 2007                       4
Inspiration for study

       The problem: How could student-teachers track their thinking/
       ideas/issues over a practicum, & develop self-awareness as
       educators (=deliberate pedagogical sense)?
    •Changing the Twitter question - Aspden & Thorpe
    •Using handheld tools - Wishart
    • Reflective practices as teaching professionals - May & Etkina
      and Howard
    •Potential to use Internet/mobiles as almost-standard means of
     communication




© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO   13 November 2007   5
Inspiration for study

       The problem: How could student-teachers track their thinking/
       ideas/issues over a practicum, & develop self-awareness as
       educators (=deliberate pedagogical sense)?
    •Changing the Twitter question - Aspden & Thorpe
    •Using handheld tools - Wishart
    • Reflective practices as teaching professionals - May & Etkina
      and Howard
    •Potential to use Internet/mobiles as almost-standard means of
     communication




© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO   13 November 2007   5
Framework: nuts and bolts
    •Second, 7-week practicum for secondary teacher education
     students posted to schools everywhere
    • 3 tweets per working day
    •From phone or web
    •Respond to questions like:
     What are you thinking?
     What are your students learning?
     What are you learning?
     What can you see?
     What do you wonder about?




© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO   13 November 2007   6
Framework: nuts and bolts
    •Second, 7-week practicum for secondary teacher education
     students posted to schools everywhere
    • 3 tweets per working day
    •From phone or web
    •Respond to questions like:
     What are you thinking?
     What are your students learning?
     What are you learning?
     What can you see?
     What do you wonder about?




© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO   13 November 2007   6
Framework: Methods & process
         • Ethical approval; open invitation to grad cohort; met
          with volunteers to outline expectations, sign consent,
          and establish accounts
         •WCEL support through e-learning project; provided
          expertise to establish Twitter account and processes
          for posting from web and/or phones
         •#uowteps; 8987 - collected posts to single account
         • At end of practicum: gathered group for focus group
          interview to review the experience, the experiment
          and its potential; gave each participant a printed
          version of their own tweets
         •Analysed posts: synthesised categories and themes
          arising from data
© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO   13 November 2007   7
Framework: Methods & process
         • Ethical approval; open invitation to grad cohort; met
          with volunteers to outline expectations, sign consent,
          and establish accounts
         •WCEL support through e-learning project; provided
          expertise to establish Twitter account and processes
          for posting from web and/or phones
         •#uowteps; 8987 - collected posts to single account
         • At end of practicum: gathered group for focus group
          interview to review the experience, the experiment
          and its potential; gave each participant a printed
          version of their own tweets
         •Analysed posts: synthesised categories and themes
          arising from data
© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO   13 November 2007   7
Findings
    •Categories:
     Pedagogy, emotions, relationships, complexity/curriculum/
     planning, reflections, social/other
    •Over time, tweets concentrated on categories of pedagogy,
     complexity/curriculum and planning
    •Large number of tweets wondered at the complex and
     contradictory nature of teaching and learning for example:
     “...realised that some kids sit back and pretend they no nothing but when u give
     them a task that can be done solo, they strutt it”

    •Mutual support nimbly and quickly available - reduced feelings
     of isolation; intensified sense of community
    •Tweets quick to read and easy to empathise with
    • Brevity a plus - to read and to focus thinking on constructing
     messages
© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO   13 November 2007      8
Findings
    •Categories:
     Pedagogy, emotions, relationships, complexity/curriculum/
     planning, reflections, social/other
    •Over time, tweets concentrated on categories of pedagogy,
     complexity/curriculum and planning
    •Large number of tweets wondered at the complex and
     contradictory nature of teaching and learning for example:
     “...realised that some kids sit back and pretend they no nothing but when u give
     them a task that can be done solo, they strutt it”

    •Mutual support nimbly and quickly available - reduced feelings
     of isolation; intensified sense of community
    •Tweets quick to read and easy to empathise with
    • Brevity a plus - to read and to focus thinking on constructing
     messages
© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO   13 November 2007      8
Continued...
   •Rigour of tweets (140 characters) initially difficult; focused
    composition of tweets later appreciated - reflections on
    reflections -
   •Tweets forced participants to consider not just what they did,
    but how and why - tweeting helped them know
   • Half continued using phones; half used web to tweet - about
    convenience and comfort and preference for full keyboard
   •A few have become inspired to continue use with classes and/
    or to link with other subject discipline teachers
   • Tweets often sent during the following time periods:
    8.15-8.30am, 12-1.30pm, after 3.20pm, 7-9pm.



© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO   13 November 2007   9
Continued...
   •Rigour of tweets (140 characters) initially difficult; focused
    composition of tweets later appreciated - reflections on
    reflections -
   •Tweets forced participants to consider not just what they did,
    but how and why - tweeting helped them know
   • Half continued using phones; half used web to tweet - about
    convenience and comfort and preference for full keyboard
   •A few have become inspired to continue use with classes and/
    or to link with other subject discipline teachers
   • Tweets often sent during the following time periods:
    8.15-8.30am, 12-1.30pm, after 3.20pm, 7-9pm.



© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO   13 November 2007   9
So what?
       Some learning uses for Twitter:
    • Logging ideas/brainstorms for projects/plans; saved chronology helpful for later
      review
    • Gaining fast and nimble advice as problems, tasks or issues are negotiated and
      solved
    • Sharing sources and leads - photos, videos, pdfs, blogs, sites, articles, Slideshare,
      retweets...
    • Developing a community of like-minded people
    • Fast conversation/discussion
    • Rapid dissemination of information or feedback
    • Real-time feedback during lectures/tutorials eg through Monitter
    • How tweets can support others: educational Twitter uses
    • Apps can be adapted for your own uses and which add functionality to Twitter: Polls,
      groups etc
    • And what some students say about using Twitter educationally


© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO   13 November 2007              10
So what?
       Some learning uses for Twitter:
    • Logging ideas/brainstorms for projects/plans; saved chronology helpful for later
      review
    • Gaining fast and nimble advice as problems, tasks or issues are negotiated and
      solved
    • Sharing sources and leads - photos, videos, pdfs, blogs, sites, articles, Slideshare,
      retweets...
    • Developing a community of like-minded people
    • Fast conversation/discussion
    • Rapid dissemination of information or feedback
    • Real-time feedback during lectures/tutorials eg through Monitter
    • How tweets can support others: educational Twitter uses
    • Apps can be adapted for your own uses and which add functionality to Twitter: Polls,
      groups etc
    • And what some students say about using Twitter educationally


© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO   13 November 2007              10
enrite



                                                  n.wright@waikato.ac.nz




© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO     13 November 2007   11
enrite



                                                  n.wright@waikato.ac.nz




© THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO     13 November 2007   11

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Twitter & reflection

  • 1. Twitter to Teach: Generating self-reflective practices with microblogging Twitter as a data source 2010
  • 2. Twitter to Teach: Generating self-reflective practices with microblogging Twitter as a data source 2010
  • 3. Wider Context • 126 million – The number of blogs on the Internet (as tracked by BlogPulse) • 84% – Percent of social network sites with more women than men. • 27.3 million – Number of tweets on Twitter per day (November, 2009) • 57% – Percentage of Twitter’s user base located in the United States. • 4.25 million – People following @aplusk (Ashton Kutcher, Twitter’s most followed user). • 350 million – People on Facebook. • 50% – Percentage of Facebook users that log in every day. • 500,000 – The number of active Facebook applications. © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 2
  • 4. Wider Context • 126 million – The number of blogs on the Internet (as tracked by BlogPulse) • 84% – Percent of social network sites with more women than men. • 27.3 million – Number of tweets on Twitter per day (November, 2009) • 57% – Percentage of Twitter’s user base located in the United States. • 4.25 million – People following @aplusk (Ashton Kutcher, Twitter’s most followed user). • 350 million – People on Facebook. • 50% – Percentage of Facebook users that log in every day. • 500,000 – The number of active Facebook applications. © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 2
  • 5. •“In a profession as challenging as teaching, honest self-reflection is key. That means that we must regularly examine what has worked and what hasn't in the classroom, despite how painful it can sometimes be to look in the mirror.” (Lewis http://k6educators.about.com/od/professionaldevelopment/a/self_reflection.htm) • “The capacity to reflect on one’s sense of self is an important component of self-awareness.” (Johnson et al, 2002) • “Students should develop self-reflection skills and appropriate views about knowledge and learning, both for their own sake and because these skills and views may be related to improvements in conceptual understanding.” (May & Etkina, 2002) • “...students’ metacognitive (ie self) awareness could enhance their self- control” (Zimmerman, 2002, p. 65) • “teachers must be able to construct pedagogical practices that have relevance and meaning to students’ social and cultural realities” (Howard, 2003, p. 195) © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 3
  • 6. Self-reflection as a focus •“In a profession as challenging as teaching, honest self-reflection is key. That means that we must regularly examine what has worked and what hasn't in the classroom, despite how painful it can sometimes be to look in the mirror.” (Lewis http://k6educators.about.com/od/professionaldevelopment/a/self_reflection.htm) • “The capacity to reflect on one’s sense of self is an important component of self-awareness.” (Johnson et al, 2002) • “Students should develop self-reflection skills and appropriate views about knowledge and learning, both for their own sake and because these skills and views may be related to improvements in conceptual understanding.” (May & Etkina, 2002) • “...students’ metacognitive (ie self) awareness could enhance their self- control” (Zimmerman, 2002, p. 65) • “teachers must be able to construct pedagogical practices that have relevance and meaning to students’ social and cultural realities” (Howard, 2003, p. 195) © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 3
  • 7. Background • Microblogging - in Twitter, a ‘tweet’ is 140 characters • Negative press: 1. McFedries (2007): “most people just don’t see the point, and others dismiss it as a massive time-suck… [because] of the unremitting triviality of most people’s updates”. 2. Lyons (2009) considers it “a playground for imbeciles, skeevy marketers, D-list celebrity half- wits, and pathetic attention seekers”. • Educational uses: (a) Holotescu and Grosseck (2009): examined how participants in a tertiary course wrote public messages, followed and contributed to discussions, monitored feeds, and continued to collaborate and converse when course ended. This was seen as a “very important advantage”, as was the “ambient awareness” of communicating in short posts. (b) Aspden and Thorpe (2009): used Twitter to understand student learning spaces: used phones to answer ‘Where do you learn?’ (c) Wishart (2009): used PDAs with initial teacher education students who “are expected to acquire, decipher, and understand a wealth of information, both pedagogical and practical” (p. 266) as they navigate between university courses and practicum (school placement) experiences. © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 4
  • 8. Background • Microblogging - in Twitter, a ‘tweet’ is 140 characters • Negative press: 1. McFedries (2007): “most people just don’t see the point, and others dismiss it as a massive time-suck… [because] of the unremitting triviality of most people’s updates”. 2. Lyons (2009) considers it “a playground for imbeciles, skeevy marketers, D-list celebrity half- wits, and pathetic attention seekers”. • Educational uses: (a) Holotescu and Grosseck (2009): examined how participants in a tertiary course wrote public messages, followed and contributed to discussions, monitored feeds, and continued to collaborate and converse when course ended. This was seen as a “very important advantage”, as was the “ambient awareness” of communicating in short posts. (b) Aspden and Thorpe (2009): used Twitter to understand student learning spaces: used phones to answer ‘Where do you learn?’ (c) Wishart (2009): used PDAs with initial teacher education students who “are expected to acquire, decipher, and understand a wealth of information, both pedagogical and practical” (p. 266) as they navigate between university courses and practicum (school placement) experiences. © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 4
  • 9. Inspiration for study The problem: How could student-teachers track their thinking/ ideas/issues over a practicum, & develop self-awareness as educators (=deliberate pedagogical sense)? •Changing the Twitter question - Aspden & Thorpe •Using handheld tools - Wishart • Reflective practices as teaching professionals - May & Etkina and Howard •Potential to use Internet/mobiles as almost-standard means of communication © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 5
  • 10. Inspiration for study The problem: How could student-teachers track their thinking/ ideas/issues over a practicum, & develop self-awareness as educators (=deliberate pedagogical sense)? •Changing the Twitter question - Aspden & Thorpe •Using handheld tools - Wishart • Reflective practices as teaching professionals - May & Etkina and Howard •Potential to use Internet/mobiles as almost-standard means of communication © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 5
  • 11. Framework: nuts and bolts •Second, 7-week practicum for secondary teacher education students posted to schools everywhere • 3 tweets per working day •From phone or web •Respond to questions like: What are you thinking? What are your students learning? What are you learning? What can you see? What do you wonder about? © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 6
  • 12. Framework: nuts and bolts •Second, 7-week practicum for secondary teacher education students posted to schools everywhere • 3 tweets per working day •From phone or web •Respond to questions like: What are you thinking? What are your students learning? What are you learning? What can you see? What do you wonder about? © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 6
  • 13. Framework: Methods & process • Ethical approval; open invitation to grad cohort; met with volunteers to outline expectations, sign consent, and establish accounts •WCEL support through e-learning project; provided expertise to establish Twitter account and processes for posting from web and/or phones •#uowteps; 8987 - collected posts to single account • At end of practicum: gathered group for focus group interview to review the experience, the experiment and its potential; gave each participant a printed version of their own tweets •Analysed posts: synthesised categories and themes arising from data © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 7
  • 14. Framework: Methods & process • Ethical approval; open invitation to grad cohort; met with volunteers to outline expectations, sign consent, and establish accounts •WCEL support through e-learning project; provided expertise to establish Twitter account and processes for posting from web and/or phones •#uowteps; 8987 - collected posts to single account • At end of practicum: gathered group for focus group interview to review the experience, the experiment and its potential; gave each participant a printed version of their own tweets •Analysed posts: synthesised categories and themes arising from data © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 7
  • 15. Findings •Categories: Pedagogy, emotions, relationships, complexity/curriculum/ planning, reflections, social/other •Over time, tweets concentrated on categories of pedagogy, complexity/curriculum and planning •Large number of tweets wondered at the complex and contradictory nature of teaching and learning for example: “...realised that some kids sit back and pretend they no nothing but when u give them a task that can be done solo, they strutt it” •Mutual support nimbly and quickly available - reduced feelings of isolation; intensified sense of community •Tweets quick to read and easy to empathise with • Brevity a plus - to read and to focus thinking on constructing messages © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 8
  • 16. Findings •Categories: Pedagogy, emotions, relationships, complexity/curriculum/ planning, reflections, social/other •Over time, tweets concentrated on categories of pedagogy, complexity/curriculum and planning •Large number of tweets wondered at the complex and contradictory nature of teaching and learning for example: “...realised that some kids sit back and pretend they no nothing but when u give them a task that can be done solo, they strutt it” •Mutual support nimbly and quickly available - reduced feelings of isolation; intensified sense of community •Tweets quick to read and easy to empathise with • Brevity a plus - to read and to focus thinking on constructing messages © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 8
  • 17. Continued... •Rigour of tweets (140 characters) initially difficult; focused composition of tweets later appreciated - reflections on reflections - •Tweets forced participants to consider not just what they did, but how and why - tweeting helped them know • Half continued using phones; half used web to tweet - about convenience and comfort and preference for full keyboard •A few have become inspired to continue use with classes and/ or to link with other subject discipline teachers • Tweets often sent during the following time periods: 8.15-8.30am, 12-1.30pm, after 3.20pm, 7-9pm. © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 9
  • 18. Continued... •Rigour of tweets (140 characters) initially difficult; focused composition of tweets later appreciated - reflections on reflections - •Tweets forced participants to consider not just what they did, but how and why - tweeting helped them know • Half continued using phones; half used web to tweet - about convenience and comfort and preference for full keyboard •A few have become inspired to continue use with classes and/ or to link with other subject discipline teachers • Tweets often sent during the following time periods: 8.15-8.30am, 12-1.30pm, after 3.20pm, 7-9pm. © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 9
  • 19. So what? Some learning uses for Twitter: • Logging ideas/brainstorms for projects/plans; saved chronology helpful for later review • Gaining fast and nimble advice as problems, tasks or issues are negotiated and solved • Sharing sources and leads - photos, videos, pdfs, blogs, sites, articles, Slideshare, retweets... • Developing a community of like-minded people • Fast conversation/discussion • Rapid dissemination of information or feedback • Real-time feedback during lectures/tutorials eg through Monitter • How tweets can support others: educational Twitter uses • Apps can be adapted for your own uses and which add functionality to Twitter: Polls, groups etc • And what some students say about using Twitter educationally © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 10
  • 20. So what? Some learning uses for Twitter: • Logging ideas/brainstorms for projects/plans; saved chronology helpful for later review • Gaining fast and nimble advice as problems, tasks or issues are negotiated and solved • Sharing sources and leads - photos, videos, pdfs, blogs, sites, articles, Slideshare, retweets... • Developing a community of like-minded people • Fast conversation/discussion • Rapid dissemination of information or feedback • Real-time feedback during lectures/tutorials eg through Monitter • How tweets can support others: educational Twitter uses • Apps can be adapted for your own uses and which add functionality to Twitter: Polls, groups etc • And what some students say about using Twitter educationally © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 10
  • 21. enrite n.wright@waikato.ac.nz © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 11
  • 22. enrite n.wright@waikato.ac.nz © THE UNIVERSITY OF WAIKATO • TE WHARE WANANGA O WAIKATO 13 November 2007 11