Category Archives: for Staff

What I learned about teaching Twitter to newbies…

Last week, I taught an introductory three-hour course on Twitter for Teachers.  It was my first time teaching about Twitter and here’s what I found that worked and what things I need to work on…

What worked:  Teaching about Twitter WITHOUT an account.

Don’t start the class by building a twitter account.  Instead, give them an opportunity to explore twitter in a safe environment where they can explore and can click on anything – which can be done by searching twitter without an account. We did this by going to  http://www.twitter.com/search    and then encouraging participants to…
 
1) Search for a topic or subject of interest, perhaps a recent event, tv show, etc.  Have them click around, exploring who the individuals are that are posting, what they are saying about the topic.

2) Eventually, the question comes up “What’s that # sign thing?”    We then transition into hashtags and talk about what they are used for.  We also provide links to some of the most popular educational hashtags – and ask them to search for some educationally related hashtags. 

We used the following sites for education related hashtags:

a) https://docs.google.com/document/d/1VelhMDERt4RxrX4rsF8aq8N2tma-gDme8fLpYMip4M0/edit?hl=en&pli=1

b) http://www.cybraryman.com/edhashtags.html

3) Next, we moved to searching for people and/or job roles.  For example, we typed in “Third Grade Teacher”, and then switched the search so it’s by people instead of tweets.  Most of the time this gave us a list of individuals who had  “Third Grade Teacher” in their bio.  Again,we gave time for them to explore, looking through these individuals for the following…

a) What types of information did they tweet?
b) How did they set up their profile? did they have a bio, what was in it?
c) Would you follow this person or not? Why?  (this is important because it impacts how you build your account) 

Overall, I was happy with how this worked out. It not only gave them a safe way to explore twitter, it also helped them out when it became time to create their twitter account.  Since they had already previewed other teacher accounts, it was much easier for them to understand why a bio and photo are important.

 

What I need to work on…

NEED: Specific classroom examples
Although we referenced the article “How Twitter is used in West Des Moines Schools” (http://wp.me/s1JF02-twitter),  this information was too generic.  Individuals who were building a professional account for themselves were fine – but those who wanted to explore it as a classroom tool for communicating with parents and students – they were desiring more detail. I need to create some specific profiles that highlight exactly how classrooms are using Twitter.  Within these profiles, I need to include screen shots showing the type of content that’s shared and how they involve/engage parents and students.

NEED: More ways to convince newbies to jump in.
The structure of our class (a single three-hour introductory course) did not lend itself to encouraging staff to “jump in”.  The time was ideal for searching and exploring twitter – but when it came time to jump in with your new account, folks were still pretty reluctance.  I’m wondering if it would be better to have a separate follow-up session? or if I just need some better structured activities for encouraging more engagement with their new accounts?

Here’s a copy of our full agenda/outline in Word : Twitter in the Classroom

What happened to the 10,000 missing assignments?

Earlier this year, we tallied the total number of missing assignments in the district and found the grand total was just over 10,000 (reference: https://wdmtech.wordpress.com/2012/02/24/10000-missing-assignments/ ).  We then set up automated email notifications to students and parents each Thursday night, giving them the exact list of missing assignments per child. 

I was recently asked the following questions related to this….

Question: “What happened after the parent notifications were turned on… did it lower the number of missing assignments? Will we continue to send out missing assignments notices to students and parents next school year? “

Answer:  
Although the parent response from the notifications was extremely positive, it did NOT lower the number of missing assignments.  In fact, the number of missing assignments continued to rise the reminder of the school year.  Despite this, we are planning to continue the student/parent notifications related to missing assignments for next school year since the parent response was so positive.

NOTE: A missing assignment is defined as an assignment for which a student has received an “M” for missing.  The “M” must be manually marked by the classroom teacher – it is not an automated feature. The charts below are the total number of “M’s” marked in the grade book.

# of missing assignments per school during 4th quarter, spring 2012

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

# students per school that have at least one missing assignment

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


% of student population that has at least one missing assignment

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Secondary Schools: Missing Assignments….

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Secondary Schools: Students w/ at least one missing assignment…

 

 

 

 

 

 

6th Grade Missing Assignments…

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

6th Grade Missing Assignments…