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Tweeting for Change

Tweeting for Change. Beth Rajan Sockman Ph.D. Patricia Green John Scagnamiglio. Tweeting for Change. Questions. What is Twitter ? How is it used? Then… in Education? How can it be used to connect researchers and practicing educators ?

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Tweeting for Change

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  1. Tweeting for Change Beth Rajan Sockman Ph.D. Patricia Green John Scagnamiglio AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  2. Tweeting for Change AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  3. Questions • What is Twitter? • How is it used? Then… in Education? • How can it be used to connect researchers and practicing educators? • What is the preliminary experience of using Twitter to connect research to practicing educators? AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  4. What is Twitter • Twitter is a social network, micro-blogging site, founded by Jack Dorsey, Biz Stone and Evan Williams in March 2006 (launched publicly in July 2006), that connects friends through sharing short messages about the latest information regarding what is interesting known as tweets. • Each Tweet is 140 characters in length. • Twitter is based in San Francisco, but it is used by people in nearly every country in the world. It now comes in the following languages: • English • French • German • Italian • Japanese • Spanish http://twitter.com/about AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  5. Twitter Overview - Use • Businesses: Twitter to quickly share information with people interested in their products and services, gather real-time market intelligence and feedback, and build relationships with customers, partners and influential people. Twitter offers businesses a chance to reach an engaged audience • Education: In classrooms – high school & college for classroom & backchannel conversations – Large lecture • Social Change: “The instruments of social media are well suited to making the existing social order more efficient” (Gladwell, 2010) .http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/10/04/101004fa_fact_gladwell?currentPage=1 • Education - PLN – Personal Learning Network AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  6. Business • Communicating with Employees • Receiving Customer Complaints • Finding or Posting a Job • Subscribe to the feed and keep yourself up to date! • Information Seeking and Sharing • Inbound Marketing Strategy • Humanizing Business • Personal Branding • Twitter Search Optimization with Hashtags • Effective Networking • Viral Marketing • Fund-raising • Online Ordering • Public Relations • Communicate Alerts AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  7. In Education: PLN – Personal Learning Network • Education – See Hashtag list • What you do not see – researchers • Researchers interacting with educators! • # hashtags do not change quickly AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  8. Hashtag Tracking: Analytics http://www.hashtracking.com • #EDCHATHashTracking.com Report • 1,000 tweets generated 1,239,080 impressions, reaching an audience of 776,280 followers within the past 24 hours AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  9. Connect Researcher with Practitioners AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  10. Question: What is the experience of the first researcher in using Twitter to connect research with practitioners AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  11. Method • Grounded in an action research scenario (Stringer, 2007). • First author has begun tweeting with the guidance of the other authors – Feb. 2011 • Recorded and analyzed experience • Desire: connect with practitioners so that they may find research valuable to inform practice. AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  12. #1 Internal Resistance (Gleicher’s formula): Plumbing the depths of internal resistance allows for continual use and growth. • Felt very intimidated – new environment • Moving very fast & didn’t want to add another thing to my world • Stars of Tweeting: Fear! • Afraid I could never be as great as others… Shell Terrell AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  13. Gleicher's Formula D x V x F > R D = Dissatisfaction with how things are now V= Vision of what is possible F= First, concrete steps that can be taken towards the vision If the product of these three factors is greater than R= Resistance then change is possible. AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  14. #2 “How to Knowledge” (Rogers, 1995): Writing for the micro-blogging environment requires skill that needs to be cultivated. Looked at links • WOW! – They were great because they were pumping out very practical ideas. • Not because they had the great stuff out there that LOOKED awesome. • http://teacherbootcamp.edublogs.org/blogs-i-recommend/ AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  15. #3 Gaining How to Knowledge (Rogers, 1995): Using hashtags and blogging to incorporate twitter allows for valuable qualitative information. • Most tweets actually referred to other websites – blogs, wikis or information • Employing other social networking tools into twitter increases the tweeters’ voice. AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  16. Creating a page with a purpose When setting up your twitter account use your real name and link company related websites to your page. Design your page with professionalism as your focus! • Include your Brand Name(s) and/or Your Given Name. • Pages must be well maintained and professional. • Contains a balance of conversational and individual Tweets. Twitter is about conversation. • Include Multi-Media • It is a good idea to put your Twitter page link in as many places as you can so as many people as possible can find you on Twitter. • Highly effective twitter pages have backgrounds that reflect a clean and professional image. Use an attractive background graphic • Be professional in your tweets. People follow you for a reason. • Include your telephone number and email address as part of your background AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  17. #4 Defining success: Success and failure on Twitter differs from traditional academic environments. Beware: Many companies will follow you. AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  18. Building Twitter PresenceBefore you begin… Large Twitter Followers Success The number of followers you have on Twitter does not mean you are popular or that people are interested in what you have to say. • What really counts is the number of conversations you are having. Are people listening to you? Are people responding to what you are saying? • Use twitter to provide valuable information and build positive relationships http://www.communityspark.com/a-beginners-guide-to-building-a-presence-on-twitter/ AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  19. #5 MY PLN -Undiscovered benefit: Benefit from the PLN aspect in terms of evolving technology • GO to Twitter using Hootsuite AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  20. Conclusion • Desire to get research out to motivated practitioners • Difficult to get desirable followers • Idea: Integrate with BLOG – get out the work of graduate students - research AECT - Jacksonville 2011

  21. References Formula for change. (2011, November 4). Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Formula_for_Change Gladwell, M. (2010, October 10). Small change: Why revolution will not be tweeted. The New Yorker. Retrieved from http://www.newyorker.com Greenhow, C. (2009). Tapping the Wealth of Social Networks for Professional Development. Learning & Leading with Technology, 36(8), 10-11. Retrieved from EBSCOhost. Miller, S. (2010). Enhance Your Twitter Experience. Learning & Leading with Technology, 37(8), 14-17. Retrieved from EBSCOhost. Stringer, E. (2007). Action research Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications. Twitter in Higher Education 2010: Usage Habits and Trends of Today’s College Faculty. (2010). Faculty Focus. http://www.facultyfocus.com/free-reports/twitter-in-higher-education-2010-usage-habits-and-trends-of-todays-college-faculty/ Young, J. R. (2010). Teaching with Twitter: Not for the Faint of Heart. Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 75(7), 9-12. Retrieved from EBSCOhost. Young, J. R. (2009). 10 High Fliers on Twitter. Chronicle of Higher Education, 55(31), A10. Retrieved from EBSCOhost. AECT - Jacksonville 2011

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