I have always believed on sitting next to the smartest
person in the room. When I first started taking classes at Dominican there were
a couple graduates from U of C and one of Harvard. You would always find me
sitting next to them. There is always someone to learn from. I wondered how I
could increase my PLN to include people that are not in the physical room with
me. Twitter Education Chats allow educators from around the world to interact
and discuss a certain topic. I recently participated in one and am on the fence
about them.
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Introduce yourself. (Screen shot) |
When I started using “The Twitter” for professional purposes
I followed @mrkemp from #whatisschool. He has a lively network of followers and
seems to share my views on education so I was interested to see what his
Twitter Chat was all about, and, bonus, the topic was interesting: future
classrooms.
Getting Ready
I am glad I prepared for my first chat. Turns out that the
moderator of the chat I wanted to participate in posted the questions ahead of
time on his blog. He also had a handy article about services you can use
services to help you manage the speed of the chat. The #whatisschool chat usually
has over 100 participants, so it can be tough to keep up.
Like the physical world, introduce yourself with hello and a
little something about yourself. Also, answer the questions and don’t try to
hijack the chat.
If you find yourself in a chat and unable to keep pace with
reading the posts you can check out the transcript, posted after the fact.
Pros of my Twitter Chat
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Screen shot of my first Twitter Chat |
I have found some great professional educators that I can
get ideas from and probably bounce ideas off of.
I realized that there are like-minded people out there that
share my positivity about my profession. This was expressed by the retweeting
and favoriting of my Tweets by fellow participants.
When I have time I would like to revisit the Twitter Chat, and I plan on reaching out to the new members of my PLN at #whatisschool to bounce some new ideas off them.
Blended Learning
I have found some interesting articles via Twitter, but the Twitter Chat yielded a gold mine: information on blended learning. @TriSciCurious tweeted about blended learning, along with a link to VIDEOS! It really helps me to see teaching practices in action, and this site is exactly what I need. We talk about blended lessons all of the time, but I had a hard time visualizing it my classroom, beyond using the tablet for listening to reading or practicing math facts.
When I have time I would like to revisit the Twitter Chat, and I plan on reaching out to the new members of my PLN at #whatisschool to bounce some new ideas off them.
Blended Learning
I have found some interesting articles via Twitter, but the Twitter Chat yielded a gold mine: information on blended learning. @TriSciCurious tweeted about blended learning, along with a link to VIDEOS! It really helps me to see teaching practices in action, and this site is exactly what I need. We talk about blended lessons all of the time, but I had a hard time visualizing it my classroom, beyond using the tablet for listening to reading or practicing math facts.
Cons of my Twitter Chat
I have little time to review the resources that were
presented by fellow participants. I imagine this will change when I finish my
coursework.
Join my PLN and follow me @rheavallarta
I'd say your "con" isn't really a con at all! The resources you were exposed to will stay available so there is no hurry! I'd suggest looking for and participating in a #5thchat that is specific to 5th grade teachers.
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