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Kate Klingensmith

Social Media as a Teaching Tool (Orgsync) - 0 views

  • Faculty, and campus administrators, can utilize social media as a tool for creating new ways to engage students by posting relevant articles, research and websites to these social media sites that students are frequenting on a very regular basis; hence, encouraging outside the classroom learning.
Kate Klingensmith

Engaging in the Social Web, Social Media, and the Facebook Phenomenon - 0 views

  • Engaging in social media is now a business imperative for universities.
  • According to Josh Bernoff of Forrester Research, three in four adults now use social tools on the internet to communicate
  • Katie Lynk Wartman, co-author of Online Social Networking on Campus: Understanding What Matters in Student Culture (Routledge, 2008)
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  • Wartman points out "Facebook is their directory. It's the first place they go to find social information. You can think of a student union and how it acts as the hub of student activity and connection. Well, there's a new student union, and it's online."
  • Rachel Reuben, director of web communication and strategic projects at SUNY New Paltz, recommends, "Just focus on a couple of tools. Focus on where your audience is. For us, that's Facebook."
Kate Klingensmith

Orgsync Blog » New Campuses from Coast to Coast - 0 views

  • At Arizona State University, OrgSync will become the primary management tool for over 700 student organizations. “As one of the largest universities in the country, we have an extensive network of clubs and organizations that will benefit greatly from the organizational tools OrgSync offers” states ASU Assistant Director for Student Development, Jennifer Stultz; “OrgSync will not only help our individual clubs and organizations grow, but will also help them better integrate with one another and into the larger ASU community.”
Kate Klingensmith

Millennial Marketing: Engaging Millennials in the Classroom - 0 views

  • To see the future of technology in the classroom, check out this slide share presentation, "Lectures That Stick: Digital Tools You can Use to Encourage Engagement and Retention."
Kate Klingensmith

Professors experiment with Twitter as teaching tool - JSOnline - 0 views

  • While many students use social media, Twitter has not pervaded college campuses the way Facebook has.
    • Kate Klingensmith
       
      so, why make them move away from where they already are? why not find a way to use Facebook like this?!
  • Marquette University associate professor Gee Ekechai uses Twitter to discuss what she's teaching in class with students and connect them with experts in the field of advertising and public relations.
  • When guest speakers come to class, some students are responsible for publishing the speaker's thoughts on Twitter during the presentation - called "live tweeting."
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  • Menck says Twitter has increased the amount of communication she has with students. She gets direct messages from students about the industry or the course. She also "listens" to the conversations students have with each other on Twitter to gauge what they're interested in or what questions they have.
    • Kate Klingensmith
       
      can be done on Schools on Facebook
  • Twitter also allows faculty members to post links to what they're reading. Students who "follow" a professor's tweets can get a look at the news stories that help inform their professor's lectures or connect with the experts their teachers are following.
  • But others, particularly those who teach in communications fields, are finding that Twitter and other social media are key devices for students and faculty to include in their professional toolbox.
  • John Jordan, an associate professor in UWM's communication department, teaches students about social media but doesn't use Facebook or Twitter with students, opting for more formal channels of communication. "Not all of yourself can be public," he said. "There are notions of professionalism. Just the little back and forth that you have with your friends - you may not want your students to ask you about that."
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