Ideas for using Twitter in the classroom



Here is the handout that we gave out at the Tech Showcase illustrating how to incorporate Twitter into your classroom.  Kudos to a great team: Jackelyn Chung, Christian Leguerrier, and myself!




Brock Meet and Tweet

Application to the Classroom
      The Goal:
      To promote collaboration between peers and schools
      To enhance writing skills (summarizing, inferring, predicting, grammar)
      To increase interest and motivation in literacy through social media

      Learning Task:
      Two (or more) classes will be connected through Twitter
      Class #1 will tweet a photo with a question to ask the other class. For example, send a photo of a burnt down house with the question “How do you think this happened?”
      Class #2 will respond within 140 characters. If the class chooses to, they may tweet back another question pertaining to the picture or they may send their own photos for.  class #1 to discuss.
      The process repeats

Uploading a Picture from your computer to Twitter

      From your twitter page click on following and then select tweet to on the dropdown menu
      Click on the camera icon in the bottom left corner of the text field



      This will automatically access your documents file in your computer
      Select a photo that you wish to upload through your “my pictures” file
      In the text field, type the twitter handle of the person you wish to send the picture to (eg. @classroom1a) 

Uploading a Picture from the Internet
      Locate a picture that is copyright free from the internet (there are many sites that offer this such as http://www.publicdomainpictures.net/)
      Select the picture that you wish to use
      Open a new tab on your web browser and go to https://bitly.com/


      Copy the url of the page where the picture is located and paste it into the field in the top right
               corner of the bitly site
      This will create a shortened form of the url which you can then copy and paste into a tweet
      When others click on this shortened link from your tweet it will take them directly to the picture

Curricular Expectations

Twitter is a fantastic tool for bringing classes together, but also for matching engaging learning tasks to various curriculum expectation.

Example:

Language Arts
      Reading (Grade 3)
      1.5 Making Inferences/ Interpreting Texts: Make inferences about texts using stated and implied ideas from the texts as evidence
      Writing (Grade 3)
      2.1 Form: Write short texts using a variety of forms
      2.3 Word Choice: Use words and phrases that will help convey their meaning as specifically as possible
      3.5 Grammar: Use parts of speech appropriately to communicate their meaning clearly, with a focus on the use of proper nouns for titles
      Media Literacy (Grade 5)
      1.2 Making Inferences/ Interpreting Messages: Use overt and implied messages to draw inferences and construct meaning in media texts

Collaborating with other classes through Twitter can also be useful for sharing ideas and experiences in Social Studies as well as Math and Science.  Students working on an Early Civilizations unit, for example, can share resources for Egyptian games and quiz each other on famous pharaohs.  Successful science experiments can be shared, or math problems can be collaborated on.

Resources
1) Site for copyright free pictures:
http://www.publicdomainpictures.net/
2) Site to crop url’s: https://bitly.com/

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