Before starting this course I intermittently used professional learning networks to quickly find lesson ideas and resources. Since discussing
PLNs in class I have expanded my horizon from Pinterest and Teacher Pay Teacher
to Twitter and Digg.
Digg I admittedly used far less than Twitter. When we first
signed up for our Digg account I selected 3 different teacher blogs to follow.
The information ranged from “How to make parents love you” to “fluency that is
not teacher directed.” One of the blogs however went cold until literally
today! Her last post previous to todays was in August. This was one of my
reservations about using an RSS feed, I was not sure if the people I initially
chose to follow were worth following. I noticed that this particular blog had
gone cold but as a teacher I don’t have time to continually search for new
blogs or teachers to follow.
This is where Twitter was able to fill the void of less
desirable RSS features and in my opinion become the superior PLN. Twitter is
convenient, easy to use, constantly being updated, plus I can get quick
responses from teachers across the globe on how to teach a certain topic. I was
really struggling to find an alternate way to teach long division so I put a
question out with the hashtag #mathchat and #edutech and got a response within
the hour. Twitter is easy to search not only for news (which came in handy this
political season) and sports (also can now watch live games via twitter), but
also for specific teaching topics like 4th grade missions, long division, and
writing prompts. I can get my personal news, social networking, and teacher
resources all in one place!
Questions:
Q1: Do I see myself using PLNs after this class is over?
A1: As a teacher I can see the benefits of having a PLN that
you like using on hand. For me this will continue to be Twitter. I have found
it extremely convenient and easy to use. The great thing is that students can
use it too! While my students are a little young for their own accounts I have
brought twitter into the classroom in other ways like using tweets as tickets
to leave and creating faux accounts for historians and tweeting from their
perspective.
Q2: Do teachers need a variety of PLNs or should they just
use one?
A2: I think it is extremely important for teachers to use as
many resources as they can because there are so many options out there. Yes I
have my favorites (twitter, tpt, and pinterest) but I am always keeping my eyes
and ears open for new resources to tap into. Just like my students, we all
learn in different ways. I say use what works best for you but keep an open
mind when something new comes along. Being a teacher means being a lifelong
learner. Don’t stick with the same boring lessons when you can easily tap into
your PLN to find new ideas.