Over
the recent past, social media has truly gained a lot of popularity more
specially amongst the youth who have used it to influence, direct, instruct,
command, control, coordinate, recreate, recognize fellow peers in implementing,
participating and organizing some activity that gives them social
gratification. This popularity of social media has now gone beyond to the
extent of being used as a learning resource. To communicate effectively in the
social media world means understanding the new rules of the game e.g., learners
want to: (i) have a say; (ii) have meaningful dialogue; (iii) be
engaged and involved in the process; (iv) interact with others; (v) be listened
to; (vi) communication
to be genuine and relevant; (vii) connect with
others engaged in similar activities etc.
The
potentials of social media go to change the traditional classroom in the following
ways:
(i)
it
changes how teachers and students communicate
(ii)
it
enhances peer collaboration
(iii)
it
helps students follow current events
(iv)
it
teaches the learners appropriate online behavior
(v)
it
keeps their (learners) minds working, even during leisure time
Integrating
social media in the class isn’t just a walk over. However, I will do the
following to ensure integration:
(i)
improve
communication by allowing students to easily message teachers and other
students with questions.
(ii)
make
a Facebook page for my class where i can schedule events, post notes and remind
students of assignments due dates.
(iii)
post
supplementary materials like links to articles and videos so students can continue learning even when class is over.
(iv)
create
a feed for my classroom so that I can tweet about upcoming assignments, events
and class news.
(v)
connect
with other classroom, teachers and parents to increase communication and build community.
(vi)
follow
up with other educator’s tweets to keep up with latest teaching trends, get
ideas and support one another.
(vii)
record
my lessons and post on YouTube so students can review them whenever they want.
Ciao!
Good Strategies Mundu. All the best.
ReplyDeleteGood point Mustafa. Creating a class tweet would inspire the learners to keep checking the feeds.
ReplyDelete