Category Archives: Twitter

Constructivism in Action

Last week, as part of an online conference for a course on learning theories and their application to online learning environments (ETEC512), I co-hosted a conference on Twitter.  There were three of us working on the presentation, and we thought a great deal about how we wanted to present the theory of constructivism as it related to online learning communities.  We met several times on Google Hangouts to sift through all of our ideas and were undecided until I had a brainwave one morning while driving down the highway en route to picking up my children from school.  I sent my classmates a voice memo as I was driving (multi-tasking is a mother’s forte) and we were off to the races.

ConstructivismIt was, without a doubt, one of the most rewarding group experiences I have had during this program to date. The level of collaboration, and the suggestions from the OLC that we tapped into on Twitter were so diverse! We had experience tweeters and newbies alongside each other, sharing good practice, and looking at constructivism from so many perspectives. The dialogue on both Twitter and through comments on the blog itself, allowed us to build a shared understanding of what constructivism in OLCs looks like in practice.

In the end, we were very pleased with the conference and I think we were able to achieve our goal.  At the end of the week, we created two tools that I would like to share here.

Our Pinterest page, compiling all the resources shared throughout the week:

PinterestThe conference’s Twitter posts on Storify:

StorifyI am moderating a workshop at the moment, and we were discussing how to use process journals with students in a paperless environment.  One of the participants remarked that, although she was certain there were plenty of options available to students today, she would need a lesson in how to set something up online for them to use.  I suggested that we could also use the tools that we have available to us already, rather than complicating the situation.  That is exactly what we did here – we were searching for a way to allow conference participants to contribute to a shared understanding of our topic, and trying to think of ways to do this online (blogs, discussion forums, google docs, Padlet, etc.)… but in the end, it worked so incredibly well to use something that is already a part of so many people’s lives. Why reinvent the wheel?

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Filed under constructivism, Education, Online Learning Communitieis, Teacher Collaboration

To tweet or not to tweet…

I have been thinking a great deal about the various social media trends that have developed in the past few years, and my involvement (or lack thereof) in them. My MET course this term has been about designing technology-supported media environments, and something that has been coming up a lot is the use of social media in the classroom.  Before diving into this idea further, a bit of self-reflection was needed.

As far as social media goes, I am an avid Facebook and Pinterest user, and I love to blog (no kidding). That being said, I knew there were gaps in my social media literacy, and so I set out to do something about it.  I decided to make a concentrated effort to explore more Twitter more thoroughly this month.  To the outsider, to “tweet” seems like a very silly thing to do, letting everyone know what you are up to at any given point in time.  This was my thought before I plunged into the twittersphere this month.  I decided to really give it some time, and see if I found it enjoyable, or useful, or even worth the time and effort I was putting into it.

I began by creating my profile, which was challenging, as I had to keep it to a certain character count and I am bit long-winded.  Then I looked for friends of mine with Twitter accounts, and was able to locate a few.  I browsed their sites and got a feel for what individuals were doing with their twitter pages; some were using them for recipes and activities, others for their professional communities, others for interests.  I decided that I would make my page a little bit of both, reflecting my multiple roles of teacher, student, mother, wife, techie geek, football enthusiast, environmentalist, Canadian patriot and baker extraordinaire.

I have been using it for only a few weeks now, and really for only a few days regularly, and these are my thoughts.  First, if used wisely, I think that Twitter can be an excellent tool for getting information out to a wide community of people in a fast, efficient way.  Second, it is a great hub of information for news feeds and professional communities, allowing me to check in with various sites with ease.  Third, I quite enjoyed the idea that anyone out there might be able to see what I was tweeting about and perhaps consider it to be as important as I myself was deeming it to be.  Finally, I found it quite addictive, and think that I have spent WAY too much time trying to follow everything as it is posted.  Overall though, I think that I will enjoy using this tweeting tool, and I look forward to exploring the possibilities that this tool holds for me as a classroom teacher or online instructor… I have a feeling that the possibilities are endless.

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