Monday, March 5, 2012

Teachers Tweeting on Twitter?



As Twitter has swept the U.S. and to an extent the developed world by storm, there are seemingly two main types of people created by its arrival on the web: those who use it and love it, and those who have not heard any compelling reason to get their feet wet tweeting with their thumbs (and fingers, if you're at your computer).

After all,  using Twitter effectively can appear time consuming and seems like a full-time job for some (or something that they just do all day AT their full-time job). There is a middle ground, however.
More and more, professionals and specifically teachers are diversifying what this application can be used for. Undoubtedly most people have the conception that Twitter is no more than an endless stream of celebrity gossip and pompous athletes spouting off in between fawning and attention-seeking by the laypeople who subscribe to their accounts. Well, that is in fact what most people using it do, but by no means is it limited to this role. As this article by Dr. Ernesto Priego notes, Twitter has an amazing potential to keep instructors, researchers, authors, and even students just as tuned in to what is relevant in their respective fields as it does for keeping teenagers informed who may want to see what Lady Gaga or LeBron James had for lunch this afternoon.



Even more, Twitter along with other 'microblogging' apps and websites is changing the way many educators and researchers go about sharing their ideas, findings, and experiences. In some respects, it is the embodiment of the term "peer review" on the grandest of scales. Twitter is a so-called two-way street, where everyone who has others following their posts on Twitter (and without followers, you may as well write in a journal as this defeats the purpose of social networking) is subjected to responses by those followers. And just as with the tweeting celebs, inevitably some of the responses will be critical, or downright negative, but this is the point - putting your ideas out there, along with recommended articles, possibly some original writing of your own, your research, etc. so that the tweeting public (including your colleagues, peers and even students) can check these things out, and Tweet back their opinion after following your links or reading your thoughts.

Beyond the dissemination of information and resources, it serves as a great tool to get in touch with others in your field of work. In this regard, it is as much a professional networking tool as it is a social networking tool, and you might find more people in one day on Twitter who can be of some use to you than you will in a life time of conferences and brunches through any professional organization. How much you pursue these new connections will determine where it takes you. If you're still not sold, check out this blog post by an edu-blogger for a first-hand account of how Twitter might impact you as a professional, teacher or otherwise.

Of course, I would be remiss to ignore the downfalls of Twitter, and there are indeed negatives that will turn people off. for instance, if you simply use a Twitter account and start following a educator or ESL researcher, you will get every post they make about ESL, linguistics, teaching technology, and so on. The bad part is, you will also be subjected to every tweet they post about their drive to work, the rude woman in line at the grocery store, and their complaints about their bratty kids (just examples of course). In short, anything they say, you will receive on your Twitter feed. There are ways around this with additional applications and tools, and this article is a good way to get started in figuring out how to filter out the junk from the meaningful information that really is available on Twitter.


As in the world in general, the seas can be rough, but if you navigate well, the journey through Twitter can be rewarding. Will it revolutionize the way education functions as the first article suggest? Well that's probably a stretch from someone in an early infatuation with the Twitter-verse, but nonetheless it is part of a networking revolution. It won't make one a better teacher necessarily, but it can definitely help you get there, and as a user, I would recommend it to even the very slightest tech-savvy individual.