Wednesday, March 13, 2019

Tweeting to Learn: Extending Social Classroom Learning Via Twitter

Tweeting to Learn: Extending Social Classroom Learning Via Twitter

https://evolllution.com/opinions/tweeting-learn-extending-social-classroom-learning-twitter/

As a social networking platform, Twitter can be a place for rich, informal learning for individual academics.[1] But can it have an equally valuable role in deepening what happens in college classrooms?
For some adult students, Twitter already has a place in their personal or professional lives, as they use it to:
  • Follow and interact with experts and sources (including news outlets, blogs and publications) in their specialty areas;

  • Access local, national and global breaking news;

  • Connect with professional organizations and fellow members; and

  • Follow conference backchannels on-site or from a distance.
As a social networking tool, Twitter creates an environment for personal learning networks that link individual students to peers and resources that build capacity and relationships in their professional lives.[2]  Harnessing that power in the higher education classroom can extend learning and introduce (or reinforce) the value of developing a global professional knowledge base.
There are myriad ways to use Twitter, both to support classroom management and increase student engagement. One example of the latter usage comes from a colleague who asks student peer groups to research topics and share discoveries on Twitter using a common course hashtag (a way to identify messages related to a specific topic in social media). Students not only share what they learn with classmates, expanding the group’s collective knowledge, but with others who read their tweets. This opens discussion and learning opportunities to not only fellow class members but to a larger global audience.
Similarly, students can follow content-related hashtags or terms (e.g., #nonprofit or  #governance for students in my classes) to access live discussions and news related to topics germane to the course. This opens the potential to not only discover live, current resources not found in textbooks, but to interact directly with those generating the content. Many authors, opinion leaders and practitioners welcome opportunities to interact directly with those interested in their work — especially students.
Students can follow conference hashtags, benefitting from knowledge and ideas shared without attending personally. For example, students in my courses regularly are encouraged to follow the backchannel of the annual Association for Research on Nonprofit Organizations and Voluntary Action  conference to sample cutting-edge research on the sector.
Backchannels can be used in the classroom as well.[3] Faculty can use Twitter to encourage comments and questions in a live classroom using a course hashtag. This creates not only an additional mode of participation for students (especially those who may hesitate to raise their hands in class), but to create a running log of ideas that resonate and resources germane to the topic in large lecture classes. (Using a curation tool such as Storify enhances the value and permanence of Twitter-based discussions — and courses more generally.) It also offers a chance to extend conversation beyond the classroom.
Twitter can support course management in other ways. For example, instructors can use it to announce quick schedule changes (e.g., session cancellations or classroom changes) that are more readily accessible than email for students using mobile technology. Students can use that same pathway to pose questions to instructors. Twitter also allows for direct messaging, offering the same immediate communication benefit in a private setting if needed.
Twitter can be used to share information and reminders about events of interest to students. It also can be used to generate thinking and interest in advance of a class meeting. For example, the instructor could send out a question or article link to stimulate thinking before class. Students then have an opportunity to come better prepared for a stimulating conversation, one that may already be in progress on Twitter.
Incorporating new tools in a classroom setting can spark anxieties for instructor and students. Adding Twitter to the mix is no exception. Setting personal boundaries as an instructor, and classroom policies for everyone, is essential.[4] Engaging students in defining ground rules about interacting with classmates, sharing information and respecting privacy improves the potential for quality participation and deepens understanding of what it means to participate in an increasingly connected and global society.
A related concern is the public nature of Twitter. People can, and occasionally do, say things they later wish they could take back. They follow profiles that tweet on topics that are, at best, not tied to a student’s academic interests. They may even get lost in their Twitter feeds during class instead of the work in front of them.
Certainly, those risks are real. They also are part of online life in a space where, if students are not already engaged, they will be — or should be — as working professionals. Modeling appropriate online behavior and jointly engaging in critical assessment of information can be an important additional contribution to their learning experience.
For a curated list of resources related to using Twitter in the classroom, click here.
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References
[1] Debra Beck, “Social Media Vital to Professional Development,” The EvoLLLution. Accessed at https://www.evolllution.com/opinions/social-media-vital-professional-development/
[2] “Building your PLN,” Pinterest. Accessed at http://www.pinterest.com/npmaven/building-your-pln/
[3] Katie Lepi, “10 New Ways Twitter is Changing the College Lecture,” Edudemic,July 25, 2012. Accessed at http://www.edudemic.com/twitter-college-lecture/

What is a PLN? Why Do I Need One?

What is a PLN? Why Do I Need One?

          In the education world, PLN stands for Personal Learning Network. What it means is that an individual has developed their own personalized “network” of fellow educators and resources who are designed to make them a better teacher. This network exists both in their real-life relationships and online through their social media connections.
          With more and more opportunities to develop one’s skills beyond what traditional routes have provided, establishing your own PLN is an essential step toward deepening your abilities as an educator. In the past, teachers were able to get connected to teaching resources through master’s courses, education journals, conferences, professional development, and other similar activities. Each of these were and still are excellent ways to broaden your knowledge and skills in education. However, because each of these requires your physical presence and procurement of physical materials, they also come with certain restrictions.
          Additionally, these traditional areas of professional development are often set up and operated by someone else. A teacher cannot control the exact content of courses, the type of professional development their district mandates, or the articles within professional journals. This means that they might be pursuing the right information, but not actually getting what they need.
          A PLN is different in that it offers two additional benefits traditional personal development cannot. First, a PLN allows an educator to completely personalize their training. If a teacher wants to learn more about implementing technology in the classroom, or discussion methods, or how to help struggling readers, they can adapt their network to provide exactly the information that’s needed. What’s even better is that, once an educator feels they have the information they require, they can immediately adapt their PLN to cater to different needs. 

Thursday, December 6, 2018

Planning model of an eTwinning project-Ioana Fedeles

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1HA7ygO4dKCIZT5ZXj2uUJE-Iw7Qa0nvrcyYyMTyB6S0/edit
Planning model of an eTwinning project
Title (maximum 250 characters): Spring Hands

Short description
(Type the description of your project, be clear and use keywords to help people to find you – maximum 1000 characters):
As a special education teacher and considering the main public, I chose to build a very simple project, where students are expected to welcome Spring.
After a previous insight about the Season, done by the teacher, the students will start to chose subtopics related to Spring (ex: animals, flowers, trees, ...).
On coloured cardboard, craftpaper or anyother material, they shall outline their hands and decorate it as they wanted. With those hands they will design a variety of images related to Spring, finally creating a poster about that topic.
Onto the second fase, the teacher will take pictures of that poster and send it to the partners, that from there, will help the kids to create a story about it, on their mother language.
That story must be retorned to the creaters of the poster, as well as the english version of the story.
The posters and respective stories will be shown and exposed in the class room.
The goal of this project is that the kids get in touch with other languages and learn that a certain work can have multiple interpretations.

Language (No formulário original este campo é de escolha múltipla quando registar o projeto.)
(You can choose more than one): English, Portuguese, Spanish, (other’s)

Pupils (No formulário original este campo permite a escolha das idades.)
(What is the age range of the pupils who will participate in the project?):
From 5 to 11 years.

Subjects (No formulário original este campo é de escolha múltipla quando registar o projeto.)
(You can choose more than one):
Special Education, Kindergarten, Primary School.

Aims
(Try to be specific, particularly in terms of competences and skills you hope your pupils will gain through this project. Refrain from stating too abstract concepts such as "European Dimension of education" or "Intercultural communication". – maximum 1000 characters):

-        Promote the knowledge about Spring.
-        Develop both the criativity and the autonomy of the pupils.
-        Create something from a part of the body (the hands).
-        Promote the construction of work groups and team work.
-        Colaborate with colleagues from other schools and other countries.
-        Develop the motricity.
-        Develop the reading and writing capabilities.


Work Process
(State how you intend to work with your partner schools and how responsibilities are shared. Give an approximate calendar of activities, state how frequently you will work with your partner; indicate how you intend to involve your pupils; if you intend to create teams of pupils of different schools, and other relevant information. – maximum 1000 characters):

This project is formed of three distinct parts, the first one being something much more dedicated to creativity and plastic expression, with the creation of a poster; the second part works the observation, orality and writing; the final part is dedicated to languages besides the mother language.
 The students start by making individual constructions, with their outlined hands, the goal of it being the build of a poster, dedicated to Spring. That poster will be photographed and later sent to the multiple partners.
Having the pictures as a work base, the partners (the class helped by the teacher) will create and write a story that shall be send to the creaters of that poster.
The building of the poster and the shipping of the respective pictures to the partners must be happen till the 30th of April 2018, while the sending of the stories will have as deadline the end of the month of May, so the posters can be exposed together with the stories.

Expected results
(Indicate here if you are planning a final product such a public Twinspace or other resources. You might envisage instead the improvement of a school practice, or new knowledge. – maximum 1000 characters):

The posters must be put up on the respective classrooms, together with all the elaborated stories for it.
All the material must be shared on Twinspace.






Friday, May 25, 2018