Changing the World, Can Twitter Change Education?
Posted by: friedafoxworth in Educational Technology, Issues in Education, Personal Reflections, Social Media, Twitter, Web 2.0, tags: BusinessWeek, change, edtech, instruction, Oprah, TwitterIt’s amazing how something so simple as a 140 character reply to the question, “What are you doing?” could have such a huge global impact on society. Tech Crunch reports,
Worldwide visitors to Twitter.com increased 95 percent in the month of March from 9.8 million to 19.1 million.
Businesses use Twitter as a source for free advertising. Politicians use Twitter for campaigning. Celebrities use Twitter to increase their celebrity status. (Can anyone explain why Oprah felt a need for this?) Twitter is having such an impact on the corporate world that according to BusinessWeek, some companies are developing social media codes of conduct for employees:
To prevent sensitive information leaks, blemishes on a reputation, and other potential liabilities of a Twittering workforce, companies are drafting new employee codes of conduct and educating workers about what they should and shouldn’t say on the site. The basic rule: Don’t be stupid.
Why is Twitter taking the world by storm? Clive Thompson sums it up:
Individually, most Twitter messages are stupefyingly trivial. But the true value of Twitter … is cumulative. The power is in the surprising effects that come from receiving thousands of pings from your posse. And this, as it turns out, suggests where the Web is heading.
So why has Twitter been so misunderstood? Because it’s experiential. Scrolling through random Twitter messages can’t explain the appeal. You have to do it — and, more important, do it with friends… It’s practically collectivist — you’re creating a shared understanding larger than yourself.
I love the phrase, “creating a shared understanding larger than yourself.” I have been Twittering for about a year and a half, and I only follow educators. My primary purpose is personal professional learning. Twitter is my best source for professional development. I’ve been slow and selective about choosing people to follow, but I have developed a wonderful network of like-minded professionals around the world. As I interact with these people in ongoing short phrases, we have a shared understanding of what it means to be passionate about the role of technology in education. We share great ideas, our successes, our frustrations, and things we’ve learned in the midst of the sprinkled tidbits of our personal lives. Teacher collaboration has been identified as a key factor in raising student achievement, and through social networking tools like Twitter, I can collaborate and learn from the best around the world.
So my question is this: since Twitter is such a powerful learning tool, how do we go about harnessing that collective learning energy for use in schools? Great Britain is considering recommendations for updating the primary curriculum, suggesting that children should be familiar with blogging, podcasts, Wikipedia and Twitter by the time they go to secondary school. They may consider dropping traditional content in favor of emphasizing informational technology, according to the Times. Although my district is very proactive in the area of providing technology equipment for schools, it still has a very conservative stance on blocking many useful social networking tools like Twitter that enhance learning.
Imagine a classroom where differentiated instruction results in students using MP3 players, cell phones, laptops, and gaming devices to pursue individual learning goals. They interact with students around the world via Twitter, Ning, or other social networking vehicles to ask questions, collaborate, share resources, and share learning in real time. Immediate response, immediate feedback, immediate dialogue about learning. Twitter is changing the way the world communicates. Why should our students be the last to benefit?
Entries (RSS)
May 17th, 2009 at 9:11 pm
nicely said Frieda- I am finding Twitter very helpful although I don’t feel adequate to really add anything.
May 18th, 2009 at 8:16 pm
You make many valid points. I am still experimenting with Twitter, but it is difficult when the teacher is not trusted to use the tool. When will we trust the students?
May 24th, 2009 at 7:23 am
[...] Changing the World, Can Twitter Change Education? [...]
May 24th, 2009 at 11:52 am
Thanks a lot for the meaningful questions and points: you can’t imagine how much! I would correctly follow your line, that is, Twitter and the like do really change the way we communicate and build up knowledge, update our professional skills, increase chances for good entertainment, socialization, etc. I’m stressing here the teenager’s point of view too, of course.
Probably it’s no longer the time to stick onto the usual “students’ ICT good mastery and poor teacher’s one”, as this question deviates us from really enjoying the educational potential of Twitter and similar tools. Sticking to technological mastery does not imply a teaching/learning effectiveness, nor even the process of making up for the didactic content.
Twitter is probably a very good tool to:
1) elicit feedback, even anonymous, though this may have some problematic implications;
2) plan specific learning projects, with clear deadlines and assignments/tasks;
3) report events/facts in real time and turn lessons into a sort of real time radio journalism. This should imply going out of schools, facing real life and themes, open classes, and so on.
The issue is “under way”, of course, and my thoughts cannot absolutely give solutions. I would be pleased to compare Twitter uses in “technologized countries/ learning communities” and other situations where this pervasive technology is not so common (such as in Italy, Europe, for example).
Cheers!