Why I Use Social Media in My Classes
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| Photo credit: screenshot from teachthought.com |
After taking this class I feel like I have a better idea of the technology I can use in my classroom. That is why I picked this article. I wanted to get some more insight into how I can integrate social media into my future classroom as well as connect and engage with students. The picture above I think is a great poster showing how social media can impact and change the classroom setting. The article that I picked to read confirms that I think using social media in the classroom is a positive thing.
I really enjoyed reading this article by Julie Smith. She teaches media courses at a college and is a firm believer in social media being present in the classroom. She uses the students phones to her advantage. She has them join the class Twitter chat to discuss with each other without having to use their voices, Kahoot, and PollEverywhere to get students engaged and having them take control of what they are learning.
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| Photo credit: screenshot from heyjuliesmith |
I love what she said here in number two. She is trying to make what she is teaching student centered and interesting for her class. Back in college and even now at Dominican every time I enter a classroom it is always said to us to try to keep our phones put away. Teachers should know by now that putting out phones away or turning them off isn't something easy for our generation. With that in mind more teachers should try to integrate social media into their lessons. Julie Smith states, "a quick cell phone activity breaks up the class, re-engages them, and shows them that I am interested in connecting with them through a medium that they love." It allows students to take their phones out as well as to use their phones to learn something new.
Julie isn't delusional or naive to the fact that students are going to be on their phones regardless of what a teacher says. There is no point in fighting it anymore, instead she uses that to her advantage. When students are interested in what they are learning and it is meaningful they won't need to snap, tweet, surf, or scroll they will be busy with what is being taught.
This article really got me interested in the idea of using social media in the classroom. If we want kids to learn we need to get on their level and use what they are using to our advantage. Lastly, Julie ends her article by encouraging her students to use social media. Use their Snapchat, Facebook, Instagram, etc with their classroom hashtag. She wants students and others to see that learning is taking place 24/7 and not just within a classroom with a teacher lecturing for an hour.






















