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Social Media for Educators Follow me @tjoosten, twitter.com/tjoosten Preso at: http://www.slideshare.net/tjooste

Social Media for Education: Cleary University

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This presentation was given as a webinar to the folks at CU in Michigan on May 18th, 2013.

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Page 1: Social Media for Education: Cleary University

Social Media for Educators

Follow me @tjoosten, twitter.com/tjoosten

Preso at: http://www.slideshare.net/tjoosten/

Page 2: Social Media for Education: Cleary University

BUILD YOUR PROFESSIONAL NETWORK ON TWITTER

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Getting started with Twitter.com

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Download the Twitter App

OR

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Send a text message

“Start”

to 40404

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How to update your bio

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Complete bio or profile

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Tweeting: Introduce yourself

I’m Tanya Joosten from University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee, teach communication, help other faculty use technology #clearysm13

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Build your network

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Following

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Hashtags

• #edusocmedia

• #edtech

• #highered

• #elearning

• #socmedia

• #sachat

• #edchat

• #lrnchat

Google: education hashtags

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Others ways to network

• Conference hashtags (#et4online, #blend13, #edu13)

• Join live sessions (#edchat, #sachat)

• Review campus twitter accounts and hasthags (@uwm, #iamuwm)

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Tips to developing a network

• Update social media profiles to include an image and a bio appropriate for the social media.

• Connect with colleagues through conference or professional group hashtags.

• Identify useful or influential colleagues and review to who they are connected.

• Participate in your educational institution’s social media accounts.

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Technology will save us!

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Facebook is the answer!

Bwahahahaha!

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It’s not about the technology, it’s all social

Larry Johnson, NMC

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global collaborative anytime anyplace mobility access literacy

informal learning

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Connect

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“A virtual place where people share; everybody and anybody can share anything anywhere anytime” (Joosten, 2012, p. 6).

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What is the student voice?

Assess your students’ needs

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I want to feel connected

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According to a survey by Joosten (2009), students reported that they need good (67%) and

frequent communication (90%) with their instructor and good communication with their classmates (75%). They also reported

that they need to feel connected to learn (80%) (http://tinyurl.com/yafu8qz).

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I don’t use email

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According to PEW Internet study, “Teens who participated in focus groups for this study said that

they view email as something you use to talk to ‘old people,’ institutions, or to send complex instructions to large groups “ (http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2005/Teens-and-Technology.aspx?r=1).

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I use social media

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95.1% of 18- and 19-year-olds use social media, primarily Facebook on a daily basis (Salaway, et al., 2009)

96% of undergraduates reported using Facebook (Smith & Caruso, 2010)

43% of undergraduate use Twitter (Smith & Caruso, 2010)

90% use mobile devices to receive and send text messages (Smith, 2010), over 1600 a month (Neilson, 2010)

92% of college-aged students watch YouTube (Moore, 2011)

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I like social media for learning

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Use

social media

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Warning!

Technology is only the medium

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Medium | Message

By Wespeck

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Words, Voice, Eye Contact, Hand Gestures, Body

Movements, Posture, Clothes

Eye Contact, Nodding, Hand

Gestures, Posture

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? Words, Text or Voice, Emoticons, Eye Contact, Hand

Gestures, Body Movements,

Posture, Clothes

? Words, Text or Voice, Emoticons, Eye Contact, Hand

Gestures, Body Movements,

Posture, Clothes

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You need

a pedagogical strategy

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Increase communication and contact

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Engage students through rich, current media

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Building cooperation and feedback

Hashtags

• CATs• Peer Instruction• Reflection

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No matter the technology, how can you enhance your pedagogy?

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Get it!

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Connect w/me

• twitter.com/tjoosten

• linkedin.com/in/tjoosten

• facebook.com/tjoosten

[email protected] | google+

• juice gyoza | second life