Workshop presented at the 27th Annual Distance Teaching and Learning Conference in Madison, WI on August 3rd, 2011.
Facebook, Twitter, and Youtube: Social media for educators
Tanya Joosten, Associate Director & Sharon Stoerger, Learning Technology Consultant, Learning Technology Center, UW–Milwaukee (with Matthew Russell and Dylan Barth)
Social media tools are changing how we communicate and build networks, offering powerful learning opportunities for students and professionals. Explore how social media can support pursuit of your instructional and professional goals.
Presentation slides
Evaluation
27TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE ON DISTANCE TEACHING & LEARNING
EVALUATION SUMMARY
Session Title: Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube: Social Media for educators
Presenter(s): Tanya Joosten and Sharon Stoerger
Scale: 5 = Excellent 4 = Very Good 3 = Good 2 = Fair 1 = Poor
ITEM MEAN SCORE
1) Presentation Style 4.55
2) Presenter knowledge 4.83
3) Quality of Information 4.61
4) Quality of visuals used 4.67
5) Quality of activities/discussions 4.55
6) Overall rating 4.67
I LEARNED:
A GREAT DEAL: 12
A MODERATE AMOUNT: 4
A LIMITED AMOUNT: 0
THE REASON I SELECTED THIS WORKSHOP
12 Curiosity about topic
4 need to know about this for a project
0 Heard speaker present before
0 recommended by someone
1 Heard/read about presenter(s)
2 Other (Please Explain)
□ Is very important to my DL courses
□ Need to introduce and promote the topic where I work
TOPICS OF FUTURE INTEREST
- YouTube
- If it catches – Google +
- This workshop assumes a lot of knowledge already. You should have session for beginners.
ATTENDEE COMMENTS
- Excellent workshop. Would love a follow-up discussion
- Excellent presenters
- Fantastic!
- Thank you! I’m already using most of these tools but appreciate some new ideas for social connectivity in courses. Also appreciate skill at keeping participants on track!
- Excellent session
- Very informative! I have a lot to do…
- Liked how we did activities instead of an information dump. Was engaging.
- Excellent session!
- Moved too fast at the beginning (twitter). Needs to explain who is seeing what after we post. Explain “risks” for those who value privacy (and exposure)
- I wish just a bit more time could have been included about the basics