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Media Literacy

Social Media in Education: Resource Toolkit

This collection of blogs, articles, and videos aims to help educators deploy social-media tools to develop professionally, connect with parents and communities, and engage students in 21st-century learning.

February 12, 2013 Updated February 19, 2015

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Creating Social Media Guidelines

  • A Guidebook for Social Media in the Classroom, by Vicki Davis (2014)

    Davis, in the first half of a pro-and-con discussion about social media in the classroom, positions it as a vital life skill and provides 12 positive examples of classroom use. For the second half of the discussion, read this post by Ben Johnson: "Too Much Technology and Not Enough Learning?"

  • The Digital Lives of Teens: What Time Is It? Now! by Matt Levinson (2013)

    In this first installment of his Digital Lives of Teens series, Levinson considers the problem of translating the teenage urgency of 'always on' into the mindfulness of 'being present.' Be sure to read all five parts of this series to learn more about about the impact of social media and instant data access on teen life and the role of parents and educators in helping teens to navigate these realities.

  • Introducing Social Media to Elementary Students, by Beth Holland (2013)

    Holland, communication coordinator and instructor at EdTech Teacher, gives three age-appropriate examples of introducing social media to children in the lower elementary grades.

  • SocialEdCon: What the Heck Do We Do With Social Media? by Betty Ray (2012)

    Ray covered the social media discussions at SocialEdCon and found that positive changes in student behavior happen when schools and parents embrace, rather than ban, social media.

Student Engagement With Social Media

  • Tweeting the Read-Aloud: Engaging and Motivating Readers, by Monica Burns (2014)

    Engage young readers by showing them the value of composing and sending tweets to authors whose books they've enjoyed during a read-aloud.

  • Frictionless Formative Assessment With Social Media, by Paige Alfonzo (2014)
  • Alfonzo, a reference librarian, cites EMS (experience sampling study) as a foundation for using social media as a formative-assessment tool for students who already live in that world.

  • Using Social Media to Teach Visual Literacy in the 21st-Century Classroom, by Dave Guymon (2014)

    Guymon, an online middle school teacher, defines visual literacy and proposes using three popular social-media modes -- Instagram, Emoji, and memes -- to enhance students' academic fluency.

  • (2013)

    Ito, an expert in young people's use of digital media, shares her research on informal learning in online communities, where students can build technology skills, learn media literacy, and create and share their work.

  • Blogging in the 21st-Century Classroom, by Michelle Lampinen (2013)

    English teacher Lampinen shows how weekly blogging assignments can transform a high school classroom into a community of enthusiastic writers.

  • How to Co-opt Students鈥 Favorite Social-Media Tools, by Todd Finley (2011)

    Finley defines social media as the new frontier, and he notes that adolescents are the early frontierspersons. Included in this blog are ten tips for adding social-media tools into the classroom.

Selecting Social-Media Tools

Home, School, and Community Connections

Social Media for Professional Development

Taking Charge: 5 Key Strategies for DIY PD, by Michelle Manno (2015)

Educators create their own professional-development opportunities with the many resources available via social media, bringing their admins on board with this new model. You may also want to check out the following related articles and posts:

Digital Citizenship and Online Safety

  • What Your Students Really Need to Know About Digital Citizenship, by Vicki Davis (2014)

    Teach your students about the "9 Key Ps" of digital citizenship as you help them acquire both proactive and experiential knowledge of the online world.

  • What Bullying Looks Like in the Digital Age and How to Prevent It, by Amy Williams (2014)

    As cyberbullying increases, our best options are recognizing patterns, keeping evidence, intervening when appropriate, reporting any incidents, and educating everyone -- bullies included.

  • Striking a Balance: Digital Tools and Distraction in School, by Mary Beth Hertz (2014)

    Hertz considers the problem of digital distraction in school, the dividing line between mobile devices helping and harming student performance, and the good-sense policy of teaching self-management skills.

  • Student Fights Bullying With Positivity, by Kevin Curwick (Updated 2013)

    Curwick, who was a high school senior when this post was written, describes how he decided to fight high school cyberbullying with a positive-themed Twitter account and ended up launching a global niceness trend.

  • Rethinking COPPA in the Age of Social Media, by Audrey Watters (2011)

    The Children's Online Privacy Protection Act was put in place in 1998; Watters suggests that it could be time for a review.

  • Digital Citizenship: Resource Roundup (2014)

    Check out 麻豆传媒入口's big list of articles, videos, and other resources on internet safety, cyberbullying, digital responsibility, and media and digital literacy. You can find all of 麻豆传媒入口's content about digital citizenship, including relevant community discussions, on 麻豆传媒入口's digital citizenship page; be sure to "+Follow" the page to receive updates.

Additional Resources on the Web

  • , USC Rossier School of Education (2016)
  • "," The Atlantic (2014)
  • "," KQED's MindShift (2013)
  • "" Pinterest's "Oh, How Pinteresting!" blog (2013)
  • ", Common Sense Media (2013)
  • "," Educational Horizons (2013)
  • "," The Innovative Educator (2013)
  • "," The Joan Ganz Cooney Center (2012)
  • "," Edudemic (2012)
  • "," TeachThought (2012)
  • "," Educational Technology and Mobile Learning
  • , edSocialMedia
  • Joe Mazza's Lead Learner blog

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Filed Under

  • Media Literacy
  • Family Engagement
  • Professional Learning
  • Technology Integration

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