Keeping up with social media--in 30 minutes a day (you heard me!) | - 60 views
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Keeping up with social media–in 30 minutes a day (you heard me!
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This presentation is from 2012; however, it has a lot of great information that I feel will really help you organize your PLN. Here is the updated presentation that corresponds with this article: http://www.slideshare.net/arikhanson/how-to-keep-up-with-social-media-in-30-minutes-a-day-of-less
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but most folks use Google Reader. You can use either.
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The Twitter List is a great way to filter out irrelevant posts when scrolling through your timeline. I'm not a fan of not being able to Tweet a response or add to the conversation though. Marissa J Williams
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o Is a great article on differentiating instruction! Eliminating Assessment Fog based on these three guidelines; identifying clear learning targets, separating logistical from academic, and providing different options/opportunities for students to demonstrate their understanding of the content is a great way to filter out unnecessary details that may confuse our students and distract them from learning objectives and what we as teachers truly expect from them. Marissa J. Williams
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I just added my highlight and sticky note to the article but I only saw comments and highlights from 2015 so I wanted to make sure that I commented in the right place.
Modeling Constructive Online Behavior | Edutopia - 12 views
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I model creating a positive digital footprint by making effective use of social networking and blogging. I owe my students that much -- after all, if they don't take control of their online identities, someone else will.
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This is so helpful and true, we need to model appropriate and responsible use to help guide our students properly when it comes to developing an online identity, and I don't think that so many educators should be so negative about social media when many of them do not really understand much about it at all, and only seek to demonize and limit students' access. - L. Beeson
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I think this raises a good point. Someone can have an image of who you are without even a word; all they have to do is look you up on social media. I make sure that my Facebook and Instagram are appropriate in case parents or anyone searches for me. I am proud for what I put out in the social media world. I try to have a positive message and I believe others should too. M. Paul
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More than anything else, I want students to share their passions and interests with the world.
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I hope to have a class blog that encourges collaboration helps to provide students with a positive model for understanding what appropriate and positive blogging is and how it can be use to involve others within that community, because we want to create inclusive communities to involve students and families in the thing we are doing within the classroom. I like the idea of having students blog as a component of their free writing, to share their work and knowledge with a larger audience than only within the classroom. - L. Beeson
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Sound like a great idea. Students can learn from one another and use higher order thinking skills to comment on and evaluate others' work. J. Whetzel
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I do not accept friend requests from students or recent graduates
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If social media isn't bad, why do we exclude students from becoming our "friends"? By excluding students from our page, aren't we inherently telling them there is something wrong with social media?
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We are protecting ourselves by creating a healthy boundary. Students need to see teachers as teachers, someone they can learn from and go to for advice and help, not as a friend. Showing students your Facebook page, models good web behavior, but maintains boundary.
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I accept requests from graduated students. However, I do not send them requests or message them without them messaging me first. I have also carefully curated my facebook profile to be student-friendly.
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I never accept friend requests from current or former students. My private social media use is about my private life. Students should not know everything that I do outside of the school setting. C. Spina
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I think there is a fine line for teachers and social media. I agree that students should wait until graduation before friend requesting their teachers, and that a teacher's Facebook page should always remain student friendly! -Julia Wisniewski
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I have read different articles about this topic. The opinions pieces have all stated that there is a certain wisdom in drawing a line when you are in a professional position. These articles applied to many professions, not just teachers. I think there are certain relationships and situations that are exceptions though. It is for each person to make that determination. It is always a good idea to make proper content choices with what you are posting but even what you think to be proper content could be viewed in a different light depending upon who is viewing it. (W.Kerr)
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I think that this is a personal decision that teachers need to make. The professional and ethical guidelines for teachers are quite clear. But you need to examine the example that your Facebook might be for your young students, and decide whether you feel it is appropriate to share it as as model that would make accessible for your students. If you have any concern about the way you utilize Facebook as a part of your digital and offline life, you might be better off keeping it private and not mentioning it to students. - L. Beeson
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I don't think my Facebook profile needs to be "student friendly" whatsoever because I am entitled to my private and personal life! We are not showing an example of Facebook being bad by not accepting our students, rather we are demonstrating how powerful privacy can be and that they should understand how to protect their privacy from certain people as well. I love my students, I love my job, but I do not need every single corner of my life to be included in my teaching career. I do however think our Facebook profiles need to be completely private so that only our friends can see what we post. I have made mine so privatized that not even my friends list or location is visible to the public. -P. Fradin
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I agree with not becoming social media friends with current or former students. Especially in today's climate, I personally think it could lead to some ethics questions. I have heard that some teachers will friend their former students a few years after graduation, if the student initiates contact. Right now, my opinion is to not friend former students, but that could change in the future. - Jason Lopez
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Flat Stanley 2 - 1 views
Introducing Social Media to Elementary Students | Edutopia - 23 views
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it has become an imperative for us as educators -- and parents -- to model appropriate digital citizenship to even our youngest learners.
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"Even our youngest learners" - yes - as young as preschool if they understand reading a book/print.
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I think of my 8 month old and her ability to swipe left and right on my husbands Kindle already! Our children are exposed to all sorts go technology from birth and we should exposed them to it but responsibly. I remember telling my husband, i didn't want her to watch tv too early or be exposed to technology without loving the pages of a book first... It's definitely hard, can be done, be technology and social media should be in moderation. -Jess Ross
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Jess,your comment took me back to another article I read about how today's young people's brains have been completely rewired and almost programmed to be receptive to technology. But your concern as to how to behave in a parentally responsible way with regard to when and how to introduce your young child to technology made me also recall earlier articles I read about the many tech-employed parents working in Silicon Valley and how they have elected not to expose their preschool and elementary children to technology and social media because these, they believe, " inhibit creative thinking, movement, human interaction and attention spans." Like you, many want their children to discover of the magic of turning a page of a book and getting lost in it. Here is a like to one such article: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/23/technology/at-waldorf-school-in-silicon-valley-technology-can-wait.html?_r=0 (O. McBride)
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Thanks O. It is amazing the how many folks in Silicon Valley have the outlook. I understand their theory, however, i do understand that our work is saturated with it and it's many time necessary to even communicate and learn. I'm looking forward to digging in to this resource and reading a little more on this subject. Thanks for the article! :) -Jess Ross
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teacher's blog post
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I JUST LOVE THIS. This is everything I hope for in my future classroom. As I have been planning my final project, I felt as if I was starting out with something way to involved and was thinking about scrapping it all. After reading this, I am keeping it and am up for the challenge, as the students will get so much out of the experience! Awesome to hear how it works in other classrooms. I will have to check out her Twitter to see how it is unfolding! (Shannon Feerrar)
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This is definitely a shining example of how successful it can be for an educator. I know I would love to implement some kind of technology into my classroom and the way this teacher is doing it is a great inspiration. The engagement piece of the students is is something we all strive for and how to change it up so our students want to keep asking those questions! -Andrea Zajac
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The classes' twitter page: https://twitter.com/MrsWideensClasshttp://kidblog.org/home/
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The more I reflect on introducing social media to our elementary students, the more I wonder if we are teaching them that they are not relevant unless they are connected to a group of individuals beyond their physical environment, or to subconsciously validate themselves by the number of likes or comments they receive from their followers...#hmmmm~ Marissa Williams
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"To teach the concept of posting and commenting, the students created physical blogs on bulletin boards in the hallway of the school." Before actually introducing a social media tool in the class we could have a blog wall to teach students #posting, #commenting and reflection to stare and frame their conversations and get them familiar with the process.
Keeping up with Social Media - Prominent Quote - 3 views
I think that this is great quote, especially for those of us that keep up with published authors and those who are in the education field who add to the academy of information that we read from in ...
AUP - 0 views
Amidst a Mobile Revolution in Schools- Will old teaching tactics work? - 0 views
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I just realized Lisa also chose the link that I used in VT this week- which is loaded with tons of valuable articles and information. So for this post I used a link from the main page we both found. Here is how the article starts, " But these days, it's not unusual to hear a teacher say, "Class, turn on your cell. It's time to work."" Also, AUPs in some schools are now becoming RUPs (Responsible Use Policy)
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YES - RUP is the "Newer term".....you may use that if you'd like!
SHOWCASE Yukon Schools: 5th Graders Create eBooks on Idioms - 2 views
You May Be a 21st Century Educator If... - Getting Smart by John Hardison - 21stedchat,... - 10 views
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Participating in a Saturday #edcamp
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You’re on an incessant search for tech tools (not tech toys) that will help students learn more efficiently, creatively, and collaboratively. Without a doubt, the learning objectives are the primary focus and educational technology is secondary.
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You’re on an incessant search for tech tools (not tech toys) that will help students learn more efficiently, creatively, and collaboratively. Without a doubt, the learning objectives are the primary focus and educational technology is secondary.
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This was one of my favorite descriptions because of all of the tools that we have learned about during the course. I think at one point I was feeling a little overwhelmed by being exposed to so many new platforms and tools for learning. However, as I have continued to learn more, I feel that I am able to look at social media tools more critically and better imagine the learning possibilities that they might lead to. I agree these tools can exist to help students work more effectively, creatively and collaboratively, but I also think they increase motivation and interest when students are allowed to try new things. The point does need to be on the learning though. The technology is only there to enhance and deepen the experience. Clark Masters
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Clark, I absolutely agree with you. There are SO many tools out there, and both in this class and EDUC 525 I felt very overwhelmed by all the new ones we were exposed to each week. This quote does a great job of breaking it down- technology is supposed to improve our ability to teach, and we only have to include the ones that work for us and our classes. There was a quote on the other article that talked about a similar idea: "No, set the bar on what you can handle in terms of time and effort. Measure your Return on Investment (ROI) with each." Social media tools can be considered toys sometimes, and if we don't know how to use them the right way, they never make the jump from toy to tool. For me, choosing those tools that I can use to be tools, and focusing on those, keeps me from getting too overwhelmed. - Emi Blaser
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I would love to do a follow up to this course (or make it 3 credits) so that we can really dig deeper with a few tools and create, use, enhance our PLN.
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Clark (and Emi) I completely agree with both of your comments. This quote for me goes back to the concept of backward design; you have to have a clear idea of your instructional objective and goal before you can effectively plan your lesson (and in this case, execute it using educational technology tools). I think learning how to sort and sift through the plethora of tools available is something that this class has taught us, and will be invaluable as we incorporate different aspects of technology and social media into our teaching. - Rachael Herr
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Good point about backwards design! I think that idea makes a really good parallel with this one. -Emi Blaser
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Clark, thanks for your comment here! I had trouble when reading several of these quotes because I wish I could use these techy tools in my low-income high population and anti-device school, that it was difficult to get insight. I'm excited to see and hear of all the updates happening here, and as someone said previously, this reminds me of the backward design approach -- that is, finding items and activities to enhance the lesson (and not making the lesson out of the tools/activities). Thanks for sharing!
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(Meredith Tate) I think this comment brings up a great point. At times, I have seen teachers make a solid effort to use technology in their classrooms (which is great!) but not make a clear connection between the digital tools and the learning objectives. I'm sure I have been guilty of this at times as well! This post reminded me that I need to identify the learning objectives FIRST and then think about how to incorporate digital tools- not focus so much on technology that I allow the learning objectives to become an afterthought.
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Engaging Your School Community Through Social Media | Edutopia - 13 views
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Link your other social media initiatives on your website
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Keep everything in one place - when you go to most sites, you'll see all social media links at the top - look at this page - everything is at the top right of the page! -Dr. Fritz
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Agreed! I try to have everything in a central place; the less clicking and navigating, the more likely people (parents and students) will use your webpage.
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Right now I am continuing to create and fine tune my weebly website, my PLP, and am seeing how effective it can be to have everything in one focal location, instead of having the user try to navigate through many pages to get to where they want to go. (John Bugay)
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I learned in a class one time that people become less likely to follow something and participate in something if it takes more than 3 clicks to access. Keeping everything is one place helps with that. Remember the 3 click rule. A good site for that is Symbaloo.com.
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you should have an official YouTube channel
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I love the idea of having a YouTube channel. I have created one and I hope to have short mini-lesson videos, or video some of read-loud books for other classes to watch. I am placed in a high needs school with a very small library. We use a lot of YouTube videos of people reading books IF we don't have access to the actual book in the school library. (William Schumacher)
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You seem to be taking a few concepts related to the "flipped classroom" - have you ever looked into that? -Dr. Fritz
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Yes, I have explored the flipped classroom concept, however I read it more as a way to post lectures/content to view as homework, allowing for more learning time during the school day. Is there more than one interpretation of this concept?
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I feel YouTube can be a great tool for a teacher to supplement work at home. Students who need that extra push might benefit from a teacher YouTube channel with content that they are currently learning.
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Our teachers use Twitter to celebrate what they are doing in their classrooms, ask questions, share resources, and document their learning.
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YES! Using Twitter has been a great way to communicate with parents and other teachers what we've been covering in class. I love Twitter because it allows for conversation (through hashtags, etc) about different learning styles and approaches, and I find that I learn most about teaching after a great discussion with another teacher. (William Schumacher)
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I need to become more comfortable with Twitter before I could handle communicating with parents using this tool. However, I have been using Class DoJo to communicate with parents this year and that is working for the parents that chose to sign up. What do you do when parents don't have a Twitter account?
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Dawn Lynn-forgot my name on the last post.
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I love the concept of using Twitter, but how do we get more schools to buy in to this? I have only be in schools that are rural communities and the use of technology is going to be varied from families that may have all the latest gadgets and are up on the latest social media apps, but then their are families who can't afford or have access to these types of resources. My biggest concern would be how are you reaching everyone? I think the school would definitely need to survey the parents/guardians and then shape their website and communication tools based off this. Unfortunately paper I think is still going to have to be necessary for some. I have the same question how do you reach the parents that don't have Twitter or Facebook?
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Forgot my name as well, Andrea Zajac, previous post.
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