1 
Twittering On and On: 
Using Twitter for student engagement and 
interaction in the classroom and beyond. 
CiCS TEL Fest 2014 
Gary C. Wood 
University of Sheffield Enterprise 
g.c.wood@sheffield.ac.uk | @GC_Wood | +GaryWood84
2 
“I’m doing the show because 16 million 
people watch it. If people are watching I’m A 
Celebrity, that is where MPs should be 
going.” 
10/09/2014 © The University of Sheffield / Gary C. Wood 
Itv.com
3 
• 140 characters about 
what people had for 
dinner? 
• Purpose: 
• Shared interests, 
purpose, goal 
• Could this apply in 
teaching? 
10/09/2014 © The University of Sheffield / Gary C. Wood 
flickr.com/skipnclick
4 
Trying it out 
• Concerns: 
• Students have devices? 
• Invading ‘their’ space? 
• Hashtags for my modules 
• Encouraged others to sign 
up – 10 minute demo. 
10/09/2014 © The University of Sheffield / Gary C. Wood 
flickr.com/misspixels
5 
Outside classroom 
• Links to additional info and 
resources 
• Discussion of topics/ideas 
• Support and reassurance 
• Replace email. 
10/09/2014 © The University of Sheffield / Gary C. Wood 
flickr.com/jiscinfonet
6 
In classroom 
• Virtual hand raising 
• Facilitate discussion 
• Quieter students get 
involved 
• Large class sizes: group 
discussion – feed in, 
feedback and feed-forward 
• Feedback from tutor. 
10/09/2014 © The University of Sheffield / Gary C. Wood 
flickr.com/rasdourian
7 
Findings 
• Twitter has worked well in extending classroom 
boundaries and encouraging in-class collaboration 
• Builds rapport with students – let them see you’re human! 
• Increased perception of availability/accessibility – but 
reduced workload 
• Students come to classes better prepared 
• Students like it. 
10/09/2014 © The University of Sheffield / Gary C. Wood 
flickr.com/chiotsrun
8 
Some hints and tips 
• Don’t assume all students 
know how to use Twitter 
• Encourage everyone to access 
• Facilitate and encourage 
discussion 
• Use lists instead of following 
students. 
10/09/2014 © The University of Sheffield / Gary C. Wood
9 
http://gcwood.staff.shef.ac.uk/sltc/14 
g.c.wood@sheffield.ac.uk | @GC_Wood | +GaryWood84 
10/09/2014 © The University of Sheffield / Gary C. Wood

Twitter in Learning & Teaching

  • 1.
    1 Twittering Onand On: Using Twitter for student engagement and interaction in the classroom and beyond. CiCS TEL Fest 2014 Gary C. Wood University of Sheffield Enterprise g.c.wood@sheffield.ac.uk | @GC_Wood | +GaryWood84
  • 2.
    2 “I’m doingthe show because 16 million people watch it. If people are watching I’m A Celebrity, that is where MPs should be going.” 10/09/2014 © The University of Sheffield / Gary C. Wood Itv.com
  • 3.
    3 • 140characters about what people had for dinner? • Purpose: • Shared interests, purpose, goal • Could this apply in teaching? 10/09/2014 © The University of Sheffield / Gary C. Wood flickr.com/skipnclick
  • 4.
    4 Trying itout • Concerns: • Students have devices? • Invading ‘their’ space? • Hashtags for my modules • Encouraged others to sign up – 10 minute demo. 10/09/2014 © The University of Sheffield / Gary C. Wood flickr.com/misspixels
  • 5.
    5 Outside classroom • Links to additional info and resources • Discussion of topics/ideas • Support and reassurance • Replace email. 10/09/2014 © The University of Sheffield / Gary C. Wood flickr.com/jiscinfonet
  • 6.
    6 In classroom • Virtual hand raising • Facilitate discussion • Quieter students get involved • Large class sizes: group discussion – feed in, feedback and feed-forward • Feedback from tutor. 10/09/2014 © The University of Sheffield / Gary C. Wood flickr.com/rasdourian
  • 7.
    7 Findings •Twitter has worked well in extending classroom boundaries and encouraging in-class collaboration • Builds rapport with students – let them see you’re human! • Increased perception of availability/accessibility – but reduced workload • Students come to classes better prepared • Students like it. 10/09/2014 © The University of Sheffield / Gary C. Wood flickr.com/chiotsrun
  • 8.
    8 Some hintsand tips • Don’t assume all students know how to use Twitter • Encourage everyone to access • Facilitate and encourage discussion • Use lists instead of following students. 10/09/2014 © The University of Sheffield / Gary C. Wood
  • 9.
    9 http://gcwood.staff.shef.ac.uk/sltc/14 g.c.wood@sheffield.ac.uk| @GC_Wood | +GaryWood84 10/09/2014 © The University of Sheffield / Gary C. Wood