Friday, April 8, 2011

Twitter and Higher Education

Twitter is my favorite microblogging ever. I really learned a lot from following those knowledgeable people in Twitter. But, I was wondering how to use Twitter in the classroom, especially the higher education classroom, where I work. I found great ideas about how educators can use twitter in education., and I want to share some of them with you.
·         Instant Feedback: Students can use Twitter to get instant responses when doing their classwork, trying to understand the material. Tweet: “I don’t understand what this reading has to do with New Media? Any ideas?” Other students then respond (Dave, 2008).
·         Writing Assignments: Remember that game you used to play where one person would start a story, the next person would continue it, etc. . .Okay try this on Twitter (Dave, 2008).
·         Students, in groups, can work on a complicated problem (such as a math problem). They tweet their progress and difficulties as they work through it. They learn from each other and the teacher gets some powerful insight into their thought processes. This allows for very focused and concrete feedback to students to refine their thinking and improve their skills(Kuropatwa, 2007).
·         While a teacher gives a lecture, students tweet their thoughts about it to each other. They can also tweet any confusions they have as they arise. This makes the lecture much more dynamic as it takes on the character of a conversation. The teacher isn't "interrupted" so they can develop new concepts fully but they can also respond instantaneously to student's learning needs. This also provides a live, in class venue where quieter students can be heard and get their questions answered immediately. The open nature of this discourse also allows the teacher to modify their presentation on the fly to address the needs of the learners in the room (Kuropatwa, 2007).
·         Students can set up a learning network that is made up of anyone from classmates to others around the world to work on content. Also, you can use Twitter to help your students gather data (Solomon & Schrum, 2010).
Kuropatwa, D. (2007). Twitter: Ephemeral learning tool. http://adifference.blogspot.com/2007/07/twitter-ephemeral-learning-tool.html
Solomon, G. & Schrum, L. (2010). Web 2.0: How-to for educators. Washington, DC: International Society for Technology in Education.

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