Social Media in the Classroom

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Transcript Social Media in the Classroom

Social Media in Education

This workshop will introduce how to incorporate social media tools into learning activities. When used properly, social media tools can boost student engagement, link students to content experts, find online classroom lessons, and help them establish an online body of work/establish their brand.

WHY IS SOCIAL LEARNING IMPORTANT?

90% of college students visit social networking sites on a regular basis

  Social learning is learners learning from each other Today's students want to document their feelings and insights in a highly timely manner  Social learning can increase comprehension of material and create new channels for students to learn. Source: http://elearningindustry.com/social-media-in-education-%E2%80%93-the-bright-side

Do students want to keep their Books and Beers separate?

 Many instructors are interested in learning how to add social media tools into their curriculum, but they aren’t sure how  Social media sites can be a huge distraction for students who aimlessly click through sites  It can be challenging to find ways to incorporate activities with social media that promote actual learning.

Do not just use social media for the sake of it!

 We’re going to spend just a short amount of time explaining the tool and focus more on ways to use them for learning activities. If you want help on the technical aspects, please set up a one-on-one training.  The learning objective is most important. Social media is a tool to help teach a concept so be sure to not lose sight of the learning for the cool factor.

 Choose 1 tool to start and make it purposeful.

Facebook is King

Facebook is the world's largest social network, with more than 900 million users. People mainly use it to connect with important people in

their life.

Facebook Pros & Cons

 Good: students can use it to connect with each other outside of the classroom.  Good: students can create a Facebook Group to form online study groups  Bad: students may want to add you as a “Friend”

Ways to Use Facebook

Build a Facebook application

: Computer science students can learn valuable skills for the future by taking on a project to create an app that can be used on Facebook.

Brainstorm

: Ask students to collaborate and brainstorm on your classroom's Facebook page.

News gathering

: Your classroom can follow media outlets or public figures relevant to your latest classroom discussions.

Archived videos

: Important lectures, slides, and more can be shared and saved on Facebook.

Familiarize yourself with students

: In large classes, it can sometimes be hard to remember each and every student. Facebook makes it a little easier to connect faces with names.

Flashcardlet

: Using Flashcardlet, you can create your own flash cards that students can study on Facebook.

Source: 100 Ways You Should Be Using Facebook in Your Classroom http://www.onlinecollege.org/2012/05/21/100-ways-you-should-be-using facebook-in-your-classroom-updated/

Twitter

 Twitter allows you to post your ideas in just 140 characters  Letters, numbers, symbols, punctuation and spaces all count as characters on Twitter.

 What all of this means is, you have to be concise. You have to know exactly what you want to say, and say it in as few words as possible . Source: http://www.copyblogger.com/twitter-writing/

Ways to Use Twitter

 Connect students with content experts who have a Twitter profile

Ways to Use Twitter

Create fake pages

: Ask students to create fake profiles for historical figures, fictional characters, and more.

Ways to Use Twitter

 Allow students to tweet their own notes during lessons and share with their peers  Have students follow you and ask them to tweet you about their learning process – including difficulties they face or resources they want to share Source: http://www.teachhub.com/50-ways-use-twitter-classroom

Ways to use YouTube

 Virtual guest speakers – start a lesson with a video that grabs students’ attention. YouTube can be great for brining in different perspectives. Audio visual is higher up on Bloom’s Taxonomy.

Ways to use YouTube

     Have students create a narrated presentation and upload it to YouTube Record your lectures and post them on YouTube for students to view – students can rewatch!

Create an introduction video Create a playlist of video related to a concept – this saves students from wasting their time searching for useless or unsuitable information. Check YouTube.com/Teachers for examples Video Everywhere

www.ted.com/talks

1500+ talks to stir your curiosity

www.khanacademy.org

 

Over 4300 videos

Our library of videos covers K-12 math, science topics such as biology, chemistry, and physics, and even reaches into the humanities with playlists on finance and history. Each video is a digestible chunk, approximately 10 minutes long, and especially purposed for viewing on the computer.

"I teach the way that I wish I was taught. The lectures are coming from me, an actual human being who is fascinated by the world around him."

—Sal

LinkedIn

WHAT IS IT?  LinkedIn helps people with employment via online networking – like an online resume  Allows you to maintain a ‘work life’ profile WAYS TO USE IT  Join a Group for join discussions and view job postings  Help them establish an online body of work.  Recommendations from colleagues or instructors

Delicious

 Social bookmarking – extends learning outside of the classroom even after a course ends   Social bookmarking site A great example is Scott Shaw’s https://delicious.com/thirdr owllc

How to Use Pinterest

Source: http://www.edudemic.com/2012/12/a-straightforward-guide-to-using-pinterest-in-education/

Ways to Use Pinterest

 Many faculty find lesson plan ideas for their classrooms.

SlideShare

SlideShare is a Web 2.0 based slide hosting service. SlideShare is the world's largest community for sharing presentations. With 60 million monthly visitors and 130 million pageviews  SlideShare was recently voted amongst the World's Top 10 tools for education & elearning.

There’s a lot of professional content on ShareShare

Blogging

  Tumblr, Wordpress, or Blogger are popular options Similar to LinkedIn, students or faculty can use these blogging sites to create their online brand.

 Blogging is a mechanism for students to show off their creative writing skills.  An easy way to get a student into blogging it to suggest that they copy the text from their discussion board posts into their blog.

My Blackboard Profile

  Bb is about to roll out their internal social media so this may reduce the need to go to other sites.

Students desire to keep their academic network separate from their personal social network, although they do want an online forum to connect with colleagues...in other words:

How can students use My Bb?

    Share notes This helps make students feel part of a community with increases engagement Chat about setting up study groups Offer support

Where do I go from here?

  Decide to learn 1 of these social media tools. Be sure to make it purposeful so that it meets a learning objective.  Contact [email protected]

to set up a one on-one appointment to learn how to use a tool.