an introduction to twitter 2014 sjcny technology-in-education conference

37
An Introduction to Twitter Background image from: Buzzfarmers and Nick Palazzo http://buzzfarmers.com/using-twitter-for-marketing/getting-to-know-twitter-lingo/

Upload: brian-wasson

Post on 06-May-2015

925 views

Category:

Education


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Slides used for the face-2-face presentation, "An Introduction to Twitter" at the 6th Annual St. Joseph's College NY Technology-in-Education Conference May 19, 2014

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

An Introduction to TwitterBackground image from: Buzzfarmers and Nick Palazzo http://buzzfarmers.com/using-twitter-for-marketing/getting-to-know-twitter-lingo/

Page 2: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

What event put Twitter on the map?

Why was it an important moment?

Page 3: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

View the original Tweet here

Page 4: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference
Page 5: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Tweet what?What it is

• Valuable tool• Massive, open or closed,

network• Human powered search• Real-time• Sinkhole

What it is not

• Pointless• Instant messaging• Easy• For celebrities only• Real-time• Sinkhole

What do you want it to be?

Page 6: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

“If you think Twitter is ‘dumb’ or ‘a waste of time’, well then it will be.”

-David Truss, Educator @datrusshttp://pairadimes.davidtruss.com/twitter-edu/

Page 7: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Account Creation- Go to twitter.com- Choose a Twitter handle … something that will

follow the @- (Make sure user name is not taken)- Keep it simple, try to keep it short, use an

abbreviation of your name or something that represents you- E.g. @profsmith @drsmith @Mrs_Smith

- Enter email address

Once account is made, try to skip the “welcome” steps by going directly back to twitter.com

Page 8: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Complete Your ProfileClick the gear icon, then Edit Profile from the Twitter home page when you are logged in

- Add a photo and a header image and stick with them

- Add your real name- Enter a link to web site, blog, etc.- Complete your bio in 160 characters or less.

Describe yourself as an educator.- Save Changes

Don’t forget to verify your account by checking the email address used to register.

Page 9: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Other Account SettingsClick the gear icon, then Settings from the Twitter home page when you are logged in

Familiarize yourself with all of these settings

Page 10: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Hold on! You can search Twitter without even having an account!

Simply go to search.twitter.com and look for content, people, organization, and more. Tap into the power of this tool right away.

Page 11: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Anatomy of a Tweet

https://twitter.com/jessicabakeman/status/465913973846454272

Page 12: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Anatomy of a Tweet

https://twitter.com/jessicabakeman/status/465913973846454272

Who Tweeted?

Can you jump in?

What’s the link?

Who is involved?

What can you do with the Tweet?

What didothers do? When?

Page 13: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Anatomy of a Tweet

Hashtag use

Use of RT (retweet) = entire tweet is wording from another user

Sometimes MT is used for “Modified Tweet”

Page 14: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Anatomy of a Tweet

Comment added after Tweet wording

Page 15: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Composing Tweets

- 140 character limit, use box on left side of home page, or icon in upper right- All of the Tweets you write appear on your profile page- Your Tweets also appear in your home timeline as well as the home timelines

of the people who follow you.- Content = anything goes, but consider your audience

Page 16: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Composing Tips

The Dot before using someone's @ name: If you put a period before someone's username at the beginning of a tweet, everyone who follows you will be able to see that tweet. If you start the tweet with someone's username, the only people who will be able to read it are those who follow both you AND the person you are tweeting.

Deleting Tweets: There is a delete button, but know that many of your followers may have seen the Tweet.

Page 17: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

http://www.pcworld.com/article/2142572/44-percent-of-twitter-users-have-never-tweeted-according-to-new-report.html

If you can’t think of anything to Tweet, you are not alone.

Page 18: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Twitter Lingo

http://www.zonua.ie/articles/explanation_of_twitter_lingo_or_twitter_terms.php

Page 19: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Twitter Lingo

@replies: Public tweets directed at specific people — anyone can see them and jump into the conversation.

direct messages (DMs): Private messages sent to specific Twitter users in your network.

hashtag: Words preceded by the # symbol. Basically, hashtags flag something as a keyword for searches.

RT or R/T: Stands for retweet, Twitter's equivalent of quoting. If you come across a tweet that you want to quote, giving credit to the original user, hover over a tweet and click the Retweet link that appears.

Twitter stream: The constantly updating and flowing timeline of everyone that you choose to follow on Twitter; also called a feed.

Page 20: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Twitter Lingo

http://mashable.com/2013/07/19/twitter-lingo-guide/

Page 21: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Interacting With OthersThere are a number of different ways to “direct” a Tweet to someone’s attention:

- Reference them directly in a public @ reply- Add in a cc: line- Add in a “via @_____” line- Send the Tweet to the timeline of your followers via the RT

Use the direct message (DM) feature to send a “private” message to someone who is following you.

Note that you can’t include links in DMs.

Page 22: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Following / FollowersThere is no secret sauce to finding Twitter users to follow. Really, there is none.

It is important, though, to grow your network.

1. Try to locate the people, companies, organization, places, etc. that you know.2. Read their profiles and click (touch) the Follow button.

3. You can unfollow users as well via the same button. Users will know that you have followed/unfollowed them.

4. Check out who they follow … follow some of their crowd.5. When you get a notice, or see, that you have been followed, check the user

out and consider following back.

Give yourself 30-days to get going. Find at least 5 accounts to follow each day. Make a real effort.

Page 23: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

http://cogdoghouse.wikispaces.com/TwitterCycle

Page 25: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

HashtagsA hashtag is simply a word or phrase (without any spaces) preceded by a, well, a hashtag: #. For example, #SJCTIE

- The origin of them on Twitter was to identify trending topics for search purposes. (Organize content and Tweets)

- Converse with other users who may or may not be following each other.- Acts as a filter- Can be misused

Page 26: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

HashtagsSo, how do you use a hashtag properly?

Is your hashtag something that other people are using?Is it based on a currently trending topic on Twitter?Is it part of a niche following for like-minded users to talk to each other?Are you using it to organize content?

If the answer to any of those questions is yes, then go ahead and use the hashtag.

But, please make sure you research the hashtag first!

Page 27: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

http://www.edudemic.com/2012-twitter-hashtags/

Page 28: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Chats & ConferencesMany times, hashtags are tied to very specific, time-sensitive, Twitter chats or real-world conferences.

Include the hashtag in your tweets during the time frame to participate. Or, for conferences, use and follow the conference tag.

Page 29: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

http://tweetreports.com/twitter-chat-schedule/

Page 30: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

http://is.gd/pcvGox

Page 31: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

http://www.insidehighered.com/calendar/twitter

Page 32: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

http://events.campustechnology.com/Events/CT-Summer-Educational-Technology-Conference/Home.aspx

Page 33: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Twitter Tools

Tweetdeckhttp://tweetdeck.com

Hootsuitehttp://hootsuite.com

Page 34: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Twitter in Life

Page 35: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Twitter in Education

Finding :: Sharing :: CommunicatingHere’s a sampling of the possibilities:

- Share resources- Get updates & news from educational organizations- Participate in real-time education events (conferences & chats)- Communicate w/colleagues & other educators- Find content including guest speakers for your class- Stay up to date in your field- Monitor worldwide events and activities- Be conversational & meet new people

Adapted from: What Does Twitter Have to Offer Academics? http://digitalsociology.org.uk/?p=48

Page 36: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Final Tips

1. Ignore unwanted Twits2. You will get spam. Ignore, block, report and move on.3. Look to see who follows you. Check out who they follow.4. Don't overload5. Get some ... give some6. Ask questions, ask for clarification, ask for advice7. Pay attention

Page 37: An Introduction to Twitter 2014 SJCNY Technology-in-Education Conference

Resources

Finding SJC Tweeters: https://twitter.com/bwasson/lists/sjcny

Related links to browse: https://www.diigo.com/user/sjctrainers/Twitter

Continue learning: http://pairadimes.davidtruss.com/twitter-edu/

Now get out there and Tweet!