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Tag : twitter

How Twitter in the Classroom is Boosting Student Engagement

Professors who wish to engage students during large lectures face an uphill battle. Not only is it a logistical impossibility for 200+ students to actively participate in a 90 minute lecture, but the downward sloping cone-shape of a lecture hall induces a one-to-many conversation. This problem is compounded by the recent budget cuts that have squeezed ever more students into each room.

Fortunately, educators (including myself) have found thatTwitter is an effective way to broaden participation in lecture. Additionally, the ubiquity of laptops and smartphones have made the integration of Twitter a virtually bureaucracy-free endeavor. This post describes the two main benefits professors find when using Twitter in lecture.


Increased Participation


Classroom shyness is like a blackhole: Once silence takes over, it never lets go. In my own experience, in a class of hundreds, the fraction of students who speak up is small, and a still tinier fraction contribute regularly.

That’s why, Dr. Monica Rankin of the University of Texas at Dallas was pleasantly surprised when her experiment with Twitter began pulling more students into discussion. “It’s been really exciting because, in classes like this, you’ll have three people who talk about the discussion material, and so to actually have 30 or 40 people at the same time talking about it is really interesting,” said Megan Malone, Teaching Assistant to Dr. Monica Rankin’s United States history course, in the video below.

During lecture, students tweet comments or questions via laptop or cell phone, while the TA and Dr. Rankin respond to a real-time feed displayed prominently in front of the room. Students who manage to live off the grid for 50 minutes can still pass in hand-written notes for the TA to tweet after class.

Students in another Twitter-friendly classroom at Purdue University agree that digital communication helps overcome the shyness barrier. “It’s just an easy way to answer questions in class without embarrassing yourself and raising your hand in a big lecture hall,” said one student. Studies frequently discover that greater participation translates into better academic performance, motivation, and a likelihood of adopting different points of view, which is why it is so striking that Twitter can foster that type of communication.


A Community of Learners


The dynamic of an intellectual ecosystem, where students dive deep into class readings and argue contentious issues outside of class, is difficult to create if discussion ends when class is over. Fortunately, Twitter has no time limit. In fact, Dr. Rankin’s colleague David Parry, Professor of Emerging Media at the University of Texas, found that Twitter chatter during class spilled over into the students’ free time.

“The first thing I noticed when the class started using Twitter was how conversations continued inside and outside of class,” Parry wrote. “Once students started Twittering I think they developed a sense of each other as people beyond the classroom space, rather than just students they saw twice a week for an hour and a half.” As a result, classroom conversation became more productive as “people were more willing to talk, and [be] more respectful of others.”

Parry’s experience is in line with results of one of the first education studies of Twitter, which found that students do indeed carry on discussion outside of the classroom.

In part, students find themselves checking the feed after hours because the public trail of Twitter chatter doubles as an excellent study aid. As one student from Rankin’s class put it, “The significant terms that we’ve talked about in discussions, we’ll tweet that, and you can [go] back [to] that, and it’s a pretty good study aid.” This, in turn, keeps Twitter on their minds, fueling the cycle of involvement.


Conclusion


For schools hit hard by the recession, Twitter is an inexpensive solution to the growing problem of increasing class sizes. It is a tried-and-true platform to let conversations flourish. Indeed, Dr. Parry declared that “it was the single thing that changed the classroom dynamics more than anything I’ve ever done teaching.”


Fresno Tweetup Goes Wild – fresnobeehive.com

Fresno Tweetup Goes Wild – From FresnoBeeHive.com

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Tweet_up_zoo_final.jpg

The Beehive and Chaffee Zoo are partnering for Fresno Tweetup Goes Wild. It’s a chance for local Twitter users to meet and mingle inside the zoo, at a discounted, after-hours event. It’s our sequel to last summer’s Great Fresno Tweetup.

This event is Saturday, April 24, from 5-8 p.m. Chaffee Zoo will be closed to the public, so it’s an exclusive event for local Twitter users. Tickets will cost $5, and kids 10 and younger are free with their parent(s).

There will be food, drinks, games and live music — all of which you can expect more details right here on The Beehive as the event gets closer.

A few notes on how the Tweetup will work:

  • You MUST message either Chaffee Zoo (@fresnozoo) or The Beehive (@fresnobeehive) on Twitter to get on the list for $5 tickets.
  • You’ll pick up your tickets along with a nametag at the will-call table before the event.
  • The Zoo says all its usual animals will be out during the Tweetup. We’ve also got a few fun things scheduled — like a Twitpic Scavenger Hunt.
  • Mark any and all Tweets about the event with the hashtag #wildfresno. And follow that hashtag for all the chatter about Fresno Tweetup Goes Wild.
  • If you’re not Twitter, you’ve got plenty of time to join and get into the swing of things. Be sure to follow @fresnobeehive and @fresnozoo first thing.

The Dalai Lama Officially Joins Twitter

The Dalai Lama Officially Joins Twitter

More and more celebrity holdouts are joining the Twitter bandwagon. First Bill Gates started tweeting, then yesterday rapper Lil Wayne joined the service. Today, another famous figure has his own Twitter presence: The Dalai Lama.

There has been an @DalaiLama account for some time. In fact, a fake Dalai Lama fooled the media and the twitterverse early last year, which was part of what spurred the creation ofverified Twitter accounts.

This Dalai Lama is verified by Twitter, though — it is the real deal. Currently, the account is pulling albums and blog posts from his website and tweeting them via twitterfeedtwitterfeed, though we bet you’ll see real engagement later on. He also only has about 600 followers, but as the media picks up on his new-found Twitter presence, that will grow as well.

TwitterTwitter is simply one of the best ways for well-known personalities to spread their message to thousands or millions of people, but it looks like a conversation between Ev and the Dalai Lama was enough of a push to get him to finally join.

We look forward to future tweets from His Holiness.

Twitter Hits 50 Million Tweets Per Day

Twitter Hits 50 Million Tweets Per Day

New stats released today by Twitter reveal that users now send out over 50 million tweets per day. That means every second, 600 tweets fly through Twitter’s network.

As we reported two weeks ago, Twitter saw more than 1.2 billion tweets in January, or around 39 million tweets per day. These numbers came from Royal Pingdom and not Twitter itself, though.

The new numbers blow past Pingdom’s stats. Some of the highlights:

- In 2007, around 5000 tweets were sent per day.

- By 2008, the number grew to 300,000 tweets per day.

- By 2009, around 2.5 million tweets were sent through Twitter every single day.

- Tweet growth shot up by 1,400% in 2009, reaching 35 million tweets per day by the end of the year.

- As of now, Twitter sees 50 million tweets created per day.

These numbers are definitely noteworthy and provide evidence against the perception that Twitter is not growing

Twitter and Digicel Eliminate SMS Charges for Haiti

Twitter and Digicel Eliminate SMS Charges for Haiti

Twitter, as a platform, played a big role in the instantaneousspread of information following the earthquake that devastated Haiti in January. Today the microblogging site is officially supporting the exchange of real-time information and offering free SMS tweets for Digicel Haiti customers.

As of now, Digicel Haiti customers won’t incur charges for the SMS tweets they send and receive through Twitter’s 40404 short code. The bottom line is that Haitians can now experience an entirely free, mobile version of TwitterTwitter.

In Twitter’s blog post on the matter, Biz Stone writes:

“Kevin Thau and our mobile team have recently arranged free SMS tweets for Digicel Haiti customers. To activate the service, mobile phone users in Haiti can text follow @oxfam to 40404. Accounts are created on the fly and any account can be followed this way.”

Twitter’s move to make SMS tweets free of charge comes more than a month after the earthquake struck Port-au-Prince, but it’s yet another great example of how the web/tech industry is stepping up to help Haiti.

Google Buzz Not a Twitter or Facebook Killer, Says Google Exec

Google Buzz Not a Twitter or Facebook Killer, Says Google Exec

GMAIL USERS: You’re welcome to join the discussion over on Mashable’s Google Buzz account.

Google Buzz is not a rival to Facebook or Twitter, says Google exec Bradley Horowitz — instead he sees it as a platform for conversation, and hopes other services will be able to flow in and out of Buzz.

In an eWeek interview earlier this week, Horowitz, Google’s VP of product management, was asked whether Buzz was intended as a challenger to Twitter and Facebook. He replied:

“Absolutely not. Per what I just said, this is creating a new category of communication. It’s filling a niche, which is not currently met in the market. I think something unique is happening on Buzz that will continue to evolve. It’s hard to create a trend line or extrapolate too much from six days of use, but certainly conversation and the conversational Web is a place where Buzz has excelled. I think it is unique and offers a compelling interesting experience.”


Conversation Is Key


Horowitz also explained that Buzz goes beyond updating your status (like Twitter) or checking in (likeFoursquare) — it’s about engagement:

“It’s not just status-casting. It’s not just checking in. It’s really meaningful interactions around meaningful topics within Buzz and it’s reaching the right audience and people are engaged. That kind of value proposition is I think unique to Buzz. I’ve heard that again and again. In the realm of positive feedback, I think that people are finding that the conversational mode of buzz is very, very powerful and the quality of audience is also great.”


Buzz: An Open System


Google’s plan, it seems, is to create an open platform for social messaging, such that Google Buzz is integrated with services all around the web. Horowitz aims to create the “most open, well integrated, well behaving social network in the industry.”

This technical openness could create the kind of developer stampede that made Google Maps, Twitter and Flickr take off. The only unknown is whether technical openness could be in opposition to the private nature of our e-mail inboxes.

How do you use Twitter, Facebook and Buzz? Let us know in the comments.

Twitter Service SIte for Sale – ReTweet.com $20,000+

Retweet.com Put Up for Sale

Retweet.com, a competitor to the much more popularTweetmeme service, has put itself on the auction block.

Retweet.com launched six months ago, declaring war on itsTwitter story aggregating competitor. The service did almost exactly the same things as Tweetmeme: discover the most retweeted and shared stories on Twitter while also providing website buttons for retweeting. Its controversial launch definitely turned heads.

Now we’ve received an e-mail from Mesiab Labs, the owners of Retweet.com, declaring that it has placed the website and technology up for auction on Flippa. The current price is $20,000 after 27 bids, with a month to go before the auction closes.

While the platform itself may not be anything special (Tweetmeme is, in our opinion, superior), both the domain and its current traffic are worth acquiring. Last month the site was able to garner more than 600,000 unique U.S. visitors, according to Compete.com. Still, that number is nothing compared to Tweetmeme’s 1.25 million U.S. visitors, which is probably why Mesiab Labs is putting the site up for sale in the first place.

We are including the letter we received in its entirety below. Let us know what you think of it, the Retweet.com platform, and the price it could sell for by the end in the comments below.


Letter from Retweet.com


Hey Ben,

We figured you might be interested in this.

We have listed Retweet.com on Flippa.com to spark a competitive
bidding process on the Retweet platform ( The Private Media Companies we’ve been
in talks with vs. Public High Profile Buyers ), as we believe it is now time for someone to take full
advantage of its potential considering the below:

When we initially conceptualized Retweet.com, we realized the
importance of the new shift that social media sites like Twitter are
making on how we filter and consume news. We developed and fostered
Retweet.com and its resulting network to help explore this concept.
It has been quite exciting to see stories break before some of the
major news media outlets and to watch blogs gain near mainstream
status. It’s also exciting to watch the pulse of the social world
shift and sway. But more than novelty, we are demonstrating
incredible new ways to apply crowd-sourcing to answer the question
“What matters, right now.”

There are some truly remarkable things about the term ReTweet. First,
as we all know it was created by the users of Twitter – NOT by the
Twitter itself. Second, like “Googling” something has become
synonymous with using a search engine, “Retweet’ing” has become
synonymous with the act of spreading online content virally.

While we aren’t the only ones in this space, we feel privileged to
participate.

Now that we’ve grown and scaled the Retweet network and
infrastructure, we’re ready to pass it on to someone who can truly
push it to the next level. We’re excited about the opportunity for a
new passionate owner to foster and grow Retweet.com and continue to
tap the potential of what is undeniably becoming a monumental shift in
news consumption.

If a suitable / qualified buyer is not found within our 30 day auction period, our
team of developers will continue to keep retweet.com fully operational
and ad-free.

Twitter Is Still Growing Rapidly [STATS]

Maybe Twitter doesn’t have a growth problem after all. According to new stats out today from Royal Pingdom, Twitter saw an all-time high of more than 1.2 billion tweets in January. Perhaps this is what CEO Evan Williams meant last month when he said that the site was hitting records “across all the metrics that matter.”

Diving a bit deeper into the numbers, Royal Pingdom reports that tweet volume grew by 16x from January ’09 to January ’10. Over the past three months, tweet volume has grown steadily at around 17 percent. In other words, if tweet volume is the metric that matters, Twitter is still growing at a very healthy clip.

Questions about Twitter’s growth have stemmed from other publicly available analytics data that shows the site is seeing a flat-to-down number of unique visitors hit its website each month. That data though, as has often been pointed out, doesn’t take into account those that use Twitter through third-party apps, both on the desktop and via mobile devices.

Still, that’s not to say that Twitter is adding users as fast as it once was. It could just be that the average Twitter user is tweeting more (Royal Pingdom doesn’t offer data on this), not to mention the ever-growing number of automated bots that tweet. In any event, here’s what the tweet growth looks like: