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TeachPaperless: Response to a Criticism about Using Twitter in the Classroom - The Diigo Meta page

teachpaperless.blogspot.com/...-to-criticism-about-using.html - Cached - Annotated View

Maggie Verster's personal annotations on this page

maggiev
  • After all, kids can write all kinds of nonsense on a sheet of paper and spread it around school, as well; they've been doing that for generations. Yet, I don't see too many teachers wondering whether we should allow them to write.

This link has been bookmarked by 20 people . It was first bookmarked on 08 Jul 2009, by Sam Harrelson.

  • 15 Dec 09
    • my students use their feeds as lifelines on quizzes and tests, as a way to share
      links and organize collaborative assignments, as a tool for hashtagging
      collaborative reference bibliographies, and as a collaborative note-taking
      backchannel during lecture and class discussion. We also use Twitterfall as a
      discussion starter and I project our Twitter feed on the wall throughout all of
      our classes to remind students about the global ramifications of what we are
      doing by learning together in a classroom.
    • the key is that the use of the social media needs to be fully integrated into
      the teaching -- specifically for the purpose of teaching the content and skills
      of the course
    • 4 more annotations...
  • 14 Nov 09
  • 06 Nov 09
    chartzell
    Carmen Hartzell

    You could take out the word Twitter and insert many other technologies and this statement would still be true.

    twitter

    • If your students aren't able to handle using Twitter like this, then you don't have a problem with Twitter; you have a problem with classroom management.
  • 04 Nov 09
  • 03 Nov 09
    • After all, kids can write all kinds of nonsense on a sheet of paper and spread it around school, as well; they've been doing that for generations. Yet, I don't see too many teachers wondering whether we should allow them to write.
  • 02 Nov 09
    ransomtech
    Steve Ransom

    blog post on defending Twitter's usefulness in the classroom.

    twitter about rationale students teaching classroom integration

    • If your students aren't able to handle using Twitter like this, then you don't have a problem with Twitter; you have a problem with classroom management.
    • incorporating ongoing discussions of digital citizenship into your lessons.
      • Michelle DeSilva

        Michelle DeSilva on 2009-11-02

        I agree with this and hope that schools begin teaching more lessons on digital citizenship as well as digital literacy. We taught both at the private school I was at last year but have noticed that my students this year in the public school are lacking in those skills.

  • 20 Jul 09
    billderry
    Bill Derry

    Social Media is not a monolith.

    It doesn't tell you what to do. There are no rules.

    There are countless ways to use Twitter; the key is that the use of the social media needs to be fully integrated into the teaching -- specifically for the purpose of teaching the content and skills of the course. So, the trick is to figure out how to do that for your course. And there's a good chance that a PLN model isn't gonna work for your kids.

    As for WHY it's important for kids to take part in authentic social media (rather than the walled garden variety), I wrote a post yesterday where I tried to sort of lay out the framework of what we're looking at on the future grid of 21st century education. It's my attempt to argue what authenticity in education means now and for the future, and I'd welcome any criticism of it.

    Anyway, Social Media is what you make it. It's yours to tinker with. So, use your imagination.

    twitter classroom blog teachpaperless Teach Paperless

  • 15 Jul 09
  • 09 Jul 09
  • 08 Jul 09
    • As I've described before, my students use their feeds as lifelines on quizzes and tests, as a way to share links and organize collaborative assignments, as a tool for hashtagging collaborative reference bibliographies, and as a collaborative note-taking backchannel during lecture and class discussion. We also use Twitterfall as a discussion starter and I project our Twitter feed on the wall throughout all of our classes to remind students about the global ramifications of what we are doing by learning together in a classroom.
    • As for worries about how kids might abuse it? I really wouldn't worry about that so much, so long as you are incorporating ongoing discussions of digital citizenship into your lessons. After all, kids can write all kinds of nonsense on a sheet of paper and spread it around school, as well; they've been doing that for generations. Yet, I don't see too many teachers wondering whether we should allow them to write.
  • griffinscience
    Sam Harrelson

    Well worded response to critics of Twitter usage with students.

    twitter technology teaching classroom management