My 8th grade classroom account has been suspended by Twitter after only two days. While my kids laughed and cheered--"We took down Twitter!" We're taking it to the streets!" "This is the way they did it in the '60s!"...it was very frustrating for me, but as teachers often have to do...I adjusted on the fly.
My guess is that my students used the #hashtag and search features too much in a short period of time. It locked up yesterday at the end of the third consecutive period posting tweets with articles linked to them.
We have all been working on the same nature-related #hashtags and there is an indication that in order to stop spammers Twitter monitors and limits how much one account sends information to any one #hashtag.
I put an email into their support desk yesterday around 10:30. I will post an update once one comes--hopefully my lesson with help another teacher about to create a classroom Twitter account.
Showing posts with label hashtags. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hashtags. Show all posts
Friday, March 9, 2012
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
Classroom Twitter Hiccups
On our second day of using Twitter to be the voice of something in nature we stumbled upon two flies in the ointment.
Hiccup #1:
Twitter limits how many searches come out of your account. It seems to be done on an hourly basis. Since I teach the first three consecutive periods of the day, my third period class hit a wall with the iPads searching on the network. My students were exploring various hashtags related to the environment and the natural world. We will be supplying a voice for various animals, insects, plants, and natural resources on social media--but, first, we need to see what is out there, what are people writing about, and then make our choices.
Curiously, the students using Twitter on the desktop did not face this limit and Twitter worked just fine from those stations all day. We only used nine active stations serving groups of three or four: six iPads and three desktops. The issue cropped during the early stages of third period, around 9:40am after having used it on and off starting at 7:50.
Troubleshooting the situation afterward, we came across this statement at Twitter:
In order to control abuse, Twitter limits how often you can search from a single network address. At corporations, events, and conferences, it is common for many people to share the same network address. In some of these cases, our rate limiting may be too strict.
If you see the following error message when using Twitter search, please help us improve our service by clicking 'let us know' and filling out the pop-up form.
It does appear that Twitter will provide a solution for us, but in the meantime I will need to limit or restructure how my students use Twitter. I will update the blog with any adjustments or suggestions offered by Twitter.
The hurdle, as I pressed for clarification, is how they currently see social media. It's social. A few faced brain-lock on the concept of using social-media as a way to research, learn, and connect for more than chuckles and good times.
Many of the students adapted--one even offered "This is fun!" as she typed her (approved) tweet on the plight of some creature. I still walked away dwelling on the 10% who struggled with the concept of what we were doing. This is definitely something I will continue to press with my students to make sure they understand the power they hold in their hands by being able to access information and access connections to real-world issues in real-time.
Hiccup #1:
Twitter limits how many searches come out of your account. It seems to be done on an hourly basis. Since I teach the first three consecutive periods of the day, my third period class hit a wall with the iPads searching on the network. My students were exploring various hashtags related to the environment and the natural world. We will be supplying a voice for various animals, insects, plants, and natural resources on social media--but, first, we need to see what is out there, what are people writing about, and then make our choices.
Curiously, the students using Twitter on the desktop did not face this limit and Twitter worked just fine from those stations all day. We only used nine active stations serving groups of three or four: six iPads and three desktops. The issue cropped during the early stages of third period, around 9:40am after having used it on and off starting at 7:50.
Troubleshooting the situation afterward, we came across this statement at Twitter:
In order to control abuse, Twitter limits how often you can search from a single network address. At corporations, events, and conferences, it is common for many people to share the same network address. In some of these cases, our rate limiting may be too strict.
If you see the following error message when using Twitter search, please help us improve our service by clicking 'let us know' and filling out the pop-up form.

Hiccup #2
Even after an introduction on the first day, complete with visual projection of the iPad screen, Twitter, and using hashtags and a whole class walk-through on the second day with the same visuals and same hashtag exploration, I found a small percentage of students (10%) who said, "I don't understand what we're doing."The hurdle, as I pressed for clarification, is how they currently see social media. It's social. A few faced brain-lock on the concept of using social-media as a way to research, learn, and connect for more than chuckles and good times.
Many of the students adapted--one even offered "This is fun!" as she typed her (approved) tweet on the plight of some creature. I still walked away dwelling on the 10% who struggled with the concept of what we were doing. This is definitely something I will continue to press with my students to make sure they understand the power they hold in their hands by being able to access information and access connections to real-world issues in real-time.
Sunday, March 4, 2012
Twitter in the Classroom
Tomorrow I take a leap with my 8th grade students in an attempt to teach them that digital tools are tools and not toys. We started on Friday with a brief conversation about Twitter--many students smiled, most do not use Twitter, but they know of it. Those who do use it, do so to keep up with friends or celebrities and athletes.
The lesson coincides with the deployment of a small set of iPads in my classroom. Acquired through a modest grant that I wrote in September, the lesson is also the first use of the iPad as a tool in my classroom.
I set up a classroom Twitter account @8grwriters last week. So far, the account is following 40 writers or writing publications. We also have a modest five followers as of today.
The account is locked into the Twitter app on the iPads. The students will not receive the password from me--they can only access the account from school, with me, and the in-class iPads.
When they Tweet they will only place their initials at the end of the tweet to help protect their anonymity, but to also help me manage who asked or said what. They may also only reply to any incoming tweets or messages only after I see them--I have an administrative iPads and monitor everything going on with the account live as it happens in class, so it is unlikely that something would slip by me.
I knew we would follow writers and try to use Twitter as a way to bring mentors into the classroom, but I was struck with inspiration while at a writing course this weekend. I am taking Literacy in Bloom which is a 3 credit graduate course offered in conjunction through the Pennsylvania Writing & Literature Project and Longwood Gardens.
The impulse came from a reading and discussion of an excerpt from David Sobel's Childhood and Nature in which he quotes Brenda Petersen:
Use the Twitter classroom to explore the nature world--to begin to help my students transition from a purely emotional connection to animals to one of a great human responsibility and awareness--see and read what is going on with animals, insects, plants, and natural resources. And then go back to square one--strive to understand the animal, insect, plant, or natural resource. Read it, see it live if we can, write about it, and write from its perspective--become the voice of the honeybee or the bluebird or the white-tailed deer.
Add to the conversation online and in our community.
Starting tomorrow I will teach them about the basics of Twitter and the difference between our following writers and our using hashtags to explore our objective of becoming an ally for something in the natural world.
I have generated a list of hashtags for the students to browse and to see what topics catch their interest. Some examples are #animals, #animalwelfare, #deforestation, #endangered, #environment, #greentweets, #ocean, #organic, #pesticides, #solar, #trees, #wildlife.
We will explore these hashtags, read the articles, find more information in our library or online, and write journal entries, informative and persuasive drafts, poetry, and then strive to publish our work whether it is through a thoughtful tweet, a blog, the local paper, or other avenues of publication for teens.
The use of a classroom Twitter account provides young people authentic audiences for their words, invites connected learning, and moves the students, their voices, and their writing outside of our four walls and into the boundless classroom of the natural world. My 8th graders are transitioning from an emotional and cognitive connection with the natural world to an ethical and ecological responsibility by the time they graduate from high school. I am hoping to provide a part of the early steps of that maturity and awareness while developing their writing skills, feeding their need to inquire, and showing them how digital tools are just that, tools, and not primarily tools.
While it may interest an individual teenager to know how Cee Lo Green may be doing today, the world will be a better place if I can also get them interested in how the planet is doing. It will be really interesting to read their questions and their subsequent essays, but it will be equally as interesting to see what kinds of connections they make, who treats their question seriously and responds, and who follows the work they are about to engage.
The lesson coincides with the deployment of a small set of iPads in my classroom. Acquired through a modest grant that I wrote in September, the lesson is also the first use of the iPad as a tool in my classroom.
I set up a classroom Twitter account @8grwriters last week. So far, the account is following 40 writers or writing publications. We also have a modest five followers as of today.
The account is locked into the Twitter app on the iPads. The students will not receive the password from me--they can only access the account from school, with me, and the in-class iPads.
When they Tweet they will only place their initials at the end of the tweet to help protect their anonymity, but to also help me manage who asked or said what. They may also only reply to any incoming tweets or messages only after I see them--I have an administrative iPads and monitor everything going on with the account live as it happens in class, so it is unlikely that something would slip by me.
I knew we would follow writers and try to use Twitter as a way to bring mentors into the classroom, but I was struck with inspiration while at a writing course this weekend. I am taking Literacy in Bloom which is a 3 credit graduate course offered in conjunction through the Pennsylvania Writing & Literature Project and Longwood Gardens.
The impulse came from a reading and discussion of an excerpt from David Sobel's Childhood and Nature in which he quotes Brenda Petersen:
In our environmental wars, the emphasis has been on saving species, not becoming them.Sobel, speaking mainly of elementary school children adds:
If we aspire to developmentally appropriate science education, then the first task is to become animals, to understand them from the inside out, before asking children to study them or save them.That gave me pause--we just finished a research paper in my class, but I had been thinking that I want them to continue using research principles in their writing. The tools and lessons of research are recursive, not isolated lessons--and the ideas flooded into me at once.
Use the Twitter classroom to explore the nature world--to begin to help my students transition from a purely emotional connection to animals to one of a great human responsibility and awareness--see and read what is going on with animals, insects, plants, and natural resources. And then go back to square one--strive to understand the animal, insect, plant, or natural resource. Read it, see it live if we can, write about it, and write from its perspective--become the voice of the honeybee or the bluebird or the white-tailed deer.
Add to the conversation online and in our community.
Starting tomorrow I will teach them about the basics of Twitter and the difference between our following writers and our using hashtags to explore our objective of becoming an ally for something in the natural world.
I have generated a list of hashtags for the students to browse and to see what topics catch their interest. Some examples are #animals, #animalwelfare, #deforestation, #endangered, #environment, #greentweets, #ocean, #organic, #pesticides, #solar, #trees, #wildlife.
We will explore these hashtags, read the articles, find more information in our library or online, and write journal entries, informative and persuasive drafts, poetry, and then strive to publish our work whether it is through a thoughtful tweet, a blog, the local paper, or other avenues of publication for teens.
The use of a classroom Twitter account provides young people authentic audiences for their words, invites connected learning, and moves the students, their voices, and their writing outside of our four walls and into the boundless classroom of the natural world. My 8th graders are transitioning from an emotional and cognitive connection with the natural world to an ethical and ecological responsibility by the time they graduate from high school. I am hoping to provide a part of the early steps of that maturity and awareness while developing their writing skills, feeding their need to inquire, and showing them how digital tools are just that, tools, and not primarily tools.
While it may interest an individual teenager to know how Cee Lo Green may be doing today, the world will be a better place if I can also get them interested in how the planet is doing. It will be really interesting to read their questions and their subsequent essays, but it will be equally as interesting to see what kinds of connections they make, who treats their question seriously and responds, and who follows the work they are about to engage.
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