Sunday, October 18, 2015

Social Media in Schools

The Tool We Should All Be Using to Improve Education

In the 1970’s the parking lot would be full of parents ready to see the school play. Or Christmas pageant. Or spelling bee. Students performed, and parents came. The school auditorium was the place where students showed off their work. The halls showed artwork that parents came by to see as they attended events. The school building was the hub of the community. Everyone came. Everyone roamed freely.

Social media in schools

A child’s bookbag went home, and Mom checked it every day. The notes were read. The artwork went on the refrigerator. Papers were signed and returned. Simple.

Today many families have someone working 24/7. Some parents are out of town. Another does shift work starting at 4 pm.

Families are changing too. Notes don’t get home. Sometimes notes get to one home, but some kids have two. Some book bags don’t even go home. Communication can be a challenge.

A new stage emerges. So does a new note home to parents.

Social Media: The New Stage

All the world’s a stage has never been truer. Parents no longer pack parking lots, but they pack Facebook. They tweet. They share pics on Instagram. They look at them. Parents congregate and share online to see what is happening.

There are those who turn up their nose at such newfangled approaches. They long for the old wooden stage with the squelchy mike and wooden seats. “Things were simpler then,” they mumble. And they were.

There were fewer stages. There were less parking lots. And the largest ballroom was the American Legion.

Now, (if I want to) I can pop my cell phone out of my pocket and bring up Periscope and stream a school play to my one hundred and ten thousand Twitter followers. I can take pics of my students and share them with Kid President and everyone following #kpawesomegirls.

When my school had Homecoming last week, thousands of people took to our Facebook page to see the pictures and videos. Everything from the announcement of the Homecoming Queen to the mini-parade was uploaded soon after it happened.

Parent Engagement Matters

The research shows that parent involvement can make as much of a difference as 3/4 to a full grade point of a child’s GPA. That’s a letter grade.

We need to involve parents. We need a new stage.

Social Media: The New Audience

But the world’s not just a stage. It is also a grand meeting place. Social media gives us largest ballroom ever assembled where people from around the world can mix, mingle, and find their clique.

Jacques du Toit and his students can be Tweeting Aztecs and Karen Lineman’s first graders can tweet what they learned today. Kathy Cassidy’s six-year-olds blog for the world. My students can write a blog about their offense at human trafficking and create apps and websites encouraging people to be kind.

Authentic Audience.

A 2008 ASCD article says,

“When student work culminates in a genuine product for an authentic audience, it makes a world of difference.”

We know that audience improves student work. Whether kids write tweets that they audition on a classroom “Tweet Board” and the teacher picks the best, or they connect in a massive Twitter chat about improving education (#stuvoice), students are eager to share. They want an audience.

Staging a Comeback in Education

Students are standing on the stage already in their private lives. So are parents.

Let me tell you who’s not on the stage. Schools. Too many schools fold down the wooden seats, turn on the squelchy mikes, plan events, and wonder why no one comes. Too many schools whine because parents don’t show up. Too many teachers complain that kids don’t want to write, or that parents won’t read to their kids anymore.

But complaints are just words. Let’s put our words out where they really matter.

We’re ignoring the world stage. We’re ignoring a powerful way to get out the powerful messages that can and will engage parents in the learning of their kids. We’re ignoring a powerful platform that will help kids want to write again: social media. Yes. Social Media!

Why aren’t more schools using social media?

Because we want to “protect kids”. We want to keep them safe. From what? Their parents actually knowing what is happening in the classroom for a change?

In reality, kids are in more danger from the person they jump into the car with after school than some invisible bogeyman who lurks on the Internet. (We teach kids how to cross the street, but how any schools talk about the risks of geotagging pics on social media? But I digress.)

Using social media in schools isn’t about trite “make progress” sayings. It isn’t even about accepting what is new or leaving behind what is old. Using social media is actually about three good old traditional values that can make a country great:

  • encouraging strong families,
  • loving kids, and
  • pursuing excellence.

What We Do Because We Love Children

When you love kids, you do what is right for them. When you love kids, you want them to be well educated. When you love kids, you empower and encourage their parents to be the best parents possible.

When you love kids, you change even when it makes you uncomfortable.

You change for kids because you love them. Social media in schools.

Powerful allies. 

We must be a generation of educators who builds a new stage. We must welcome a new way to communicate with parents, show student work, and educate for student success.

If a school building constructed 50 years ago had never been maintained or improved, we would complain. It is time to update our communications methods too.

For, we cannot let generations future look back upon the watchers on the wall and see a band of educators and parents who saw only a frozen north. Social media and schools need not wed in a blood-red wedding.

Social media and schools make powerful allies, not sworn enemies.

More work I’ve created on social media in schools

The post Social Media in Schools appeared first on Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher helping educators be excellent every day. Meow!

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