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Screenshot from May 13 th. When I took this screenshot, I was working on my Norwegian so I had set up all of my default languages on my computer to be Norwegian. @ EdweekComm.
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Screenshot from May 13th When I took this screenshot, I was working on my Norwegian so I had set up all of my default languages on my computer to be Norwegian.
@EdweekComm This twitter account is an American based educational commentary. They give links daily to blogs and articles on those important foundational concepts of teaching.
@pgow Peter Gow is again inline with my favorite types of twitter posters. By this I mean that he posts a large amount of links to articles, and other bloggers. This allows me to learn more about a specific idea than can be expressed in 140 characters. On top of just his tweets, his website www.notyourfathersschool.org is full of several interesting posts on his thoughts of schools in the twenty-first century.
@EconomicPolicy This may seem like a twitter handle that is not quite in line with the purpose of this assignment, but for me I wanted to use this as an example of how I originally used twitter for my educational purposes. I started off using it as a means to gain information relative to my specialization in social studies. I use handles such as this or various news agencies to keep informed of the actual content that I will be dealing with on a day to day basis as a social studies teacher.
Hashtags • Hashtags can be an amazing source of gathering information. • These hashtags have hundreds of posts every hour. • One thing that I have learned about education is the more that you can expand the breadth of sources of information, the more complete it will be. • There is no way that one can follow everyone who has great points on education so this is where hashtags come into play.
June 15 This time around, I changed it back to English for this screenshot. In the past month, I have produced 30 Tweets, 60 new follows, and have gained 11 new followers.