Tuesday, December 8, 2015

RILE # 6

Well folks, we have come to the last RILE update. If you have managed to follow along with me through my twitter failure, then you might be a little relieved that this journey has come to an end. I think I might be.

As we all know, Twitter and I do not get along, so I have refocused my RILEs to highlighting educators who have used Twitter well. Maybe you can then be inspired by their success, instead of my failures. Today, however, I am going to do something different. Today I am going to write about the power of the hash tag.

#

Hashtags on Twitter is a way to categorize all of the post about a certain subject. For example: everyone who posts tweets about Canada's Wonderland would hashtag #canadaswonderland and if you searched for that hashtag, your post would me among thousands of similar posts who also #canadaswonderland.

For educators, hashtags could be a very helpful tool when navigating Twitter to look at different posts. However, in my search, I have found that educators also use hashtags to have conversations. Here is what I found:

"Many of the hashtags have “meeting times” where educators agree to “meet and tweet”–that is, send out messages on a topic at a certain time on a certain day.
If you do participate at the agreed upon time, you’ll see the tweets stream in live and participate in said conversation (via twitter) in what is nearly real-time. But if you can’t make it, the great part about a hashtag is that it does the sorting for you. You can search for messages assigned to a given hashtag anytime–tomorrow, Sunday night, or during your planning period next week.
Note, this list of hashtags will be updated periodically, including reorganization, and functional linking on all hashtags."
I thought that was pretty cool, and a different way to look at the '#'.
Thanks for checking in!

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

RILE # 5

EDUCATOR NUMBER THREE

Account: @coolcatteacher

Many educators use twitter as a forum to share different articles, quotes, and educational tools.
Vicki Davis, author of the Cool Cat Teacher blog, uses Twitter to share her thoughts on how to navigate the use of new technologies in the profession. She does this by sharing articles about educational programs, offering tutorials on web tools, or even just voicing her passion for working with kids.

Because many educators use Twitter to share different fun tools, I thought I would add a second educator highlight.

EDUCATOR NUMBER FOUR

Account: @feedtheteacher

Giselle Santos uses Twitter to share different technology resources and gadgets that can play apart in education. Fun fact about Giselle, she lives in Brazil! Twitter, well and the internet in general, allows educators to connect to there professionals all over the world. Although a lot of her tweets are in Spanish, she does share some really good english resources as well. One of the ones that I liked from her account was when she shared this link: http://mashable.com/2015/10/16/childrens-coding-book/#wEPWjyxSHiqW "Colourful children's book introduces kids to the basics of code"
As my presentation group is doing the hour of code, it has been cool to see how other educators are getting on board. This children book use coding symbolize and concepts in introduce kids to the very basics of coding. I would like to get a hold of this book!
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