Exploring students’ Twitter use in the online classroom across 4 years

Q1 Social Sciences E-Learning Pub Date : 2023-04-07 DOI:10.1177/20427530231167644
Linda Rohr, Jane Costello, Laura Squires
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Online asynchronous courses require close attention to course design to ensure there are strategies in place to foster social presence to build stronger senses of community and to motivate students to engage (content, peers and instructors). Judicious use of social media may serve this purpose. Since its inception, social media, Twitter in particular, has been employed in higher education courses for teaching and learning experiences with a notable impact on student engagement and social presence. This research examines students’ use of Twitter for assessment and interaction in the online asynchronous classroom from 2014 to 2018, to determine if there has been an increase in the length, amount or content within Tweets, and if students report stronger engagement and interaction following the use of Twitter for assessment. While results indicate such a connection exists, students were more focused on completing course requirements than creating connections or interacting with others, and were bothered by the constraints of the Tweet length.
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研究4年来学生在网上课堂上使用Twitter的情况
在线异步课程需要密切关注课程设计,以确保有适当的策略来促进社会存在,以建立更强的社区意识,并激励学生参与(内容,同伴和教师)。明智地使用社交媒体可以达到这一目的。自成立以来,社交媒体,特别是Twitter,已经被用于高等教育课程的教学和学习体验,对学生的参与和社会存在产生了显著影响。本研究考察了2014年至2018年学生在在线异步课堂中使用Twitter进行评估和互动的情况,以确定推文的长度、数量或内容是否有所增加,以及学生在使用Twitter进行评估后是否报告了更强的参与度和互动。虽然结果表明这种联系是存在的,但学生们更专注于完成课程要求,而不是建立联系或与他人互动,并且被Tweet长度的限制所困扰。
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来源期刊
E-Learning
E-Learning Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: E-Learning and Digital Media is a peer-reviewed international journal directed towards the study and research of e-learning in its diverse aspects: pedagogical, curricular, sociological, economic, philosophical and political. This journal explores the ways that different disciplines and alternative approaches can shed light on the study of technically mediated education. Working at the intersection of theoretical psychology, sociology, history, politics and philosophy it poses new questions and offers new answers for research and practice related to digital technologies in education. The change of the title of the journal in 2010 from E-Learning to E-Learning and Digital Media is expressive of this new and emphatically interdisciplinary orientation, and also reflects the fact that technologically-mediated education needs to be located within the political economy and informational ecology of changing mediatic forms.
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