Tag Archives: social media

Do you use use social media in the classroom?

The Center for Teaching and Technology is delighted to host Dr. Leigh Graves Wolf as she presents:

Weaving Social Media into the Online, Hybrid, or Face-to-Face Classroom

Dr. Wolf will share her experiences with using social media in the Master of Arts in Educational Technology program. She will discuss how she uses various tools (like Twitter, Facebook, WordPress, Pinterest, Instagram and ifttt) in her roles as Advisor, Instructor and Program Coordinator. In addition to an overview of the tools available, you are highly encouraged to BYOD (bring your own device) and come with questions and/or stories of your own experiences with social media.

Date: March 27th, 2012
Time: 10:00 – 11:00 am
Location: 133F Erickson Hall

Social Media in the Classroom

From the Chronicle of Higher Education, Wired Campus pages:

“About 30 students at Duke University spent a recent weekend watching YouTube clips and Twittering about them.

…..

Negar Mottahedeh, an assistant professor of literature at Duke who teaches the introductory film class, assigned the film festival as a final group project. It complemented other social-media elements in her course, including asking students to post weekly papers on blogs for comment from classmates; assembling Wikis of movie-term definitions; and allowing students to use Twitter during lectures to discuss the material.”

How do you feel about he use of social media in the classroom? Does it have a place in Teacher Education?  In the K-12 classroom?  Earlier this semester, the Center helped set up a private, password protected UStream.tv Channel for a doctoral student in CEP940 that could not travel because of a significant leg injury.  For 4 weeks, a camera and laptop were used to feed the video and audio of the class via UStream to the student in Holland, Michigan.  The student participated in the discussion via the built in chat feature of Ustream and using Today’s Meet, which is a single event Twitter-like micro-blogging tool.  Could tools like this be used for regular distance education participation?  In years past, this kind of participation would have only been available through videoconferencing at a remote site that the student would have to travel to and at a significant cost.  Now with high speed Internet available in many areas, there is the possibility that UStream.tv, Skype and back channel tools like Today’s Meet can be used to expand the reach of distance education programs.