Twitter Project – Twitter Survey
During the first semester my US History students completed two different Twitter projects. At the end of the semester I asked them to complete a survey about these projects. The Twitter assignments were similar to the idea I posted on this blog over the summer.
The first question I asked them was:
What is the best academic benefit of using Twitter?
Hearing what my peers think about issues 37%
Learning things I wouldn’t have otherwise 34%
Sharing historical resources 17%
Helping to draw connections between past and present 12%
My students, like most teenagers, enjoyed using Twitter for class, but would likely not use it if I had not introduced it in class. In an effort to dig more into this, I asked the following question:
What would make you use Twitter more?
Easier to see people ‘replying’ to me 31%
Better integration into Facebook 22%
Following more people/orgs who have similar interests to me 19%
Others using it more 19%
Better integration on my mobile device 10%
And then, just out of curiosity, I asked the following:
What ways do you use/follow Twitter?
Web interface (twitter.com) 93%
Tweetdeck 34%
I get emails telling me there’s been an update 10%
App on my mobile device 8%
I also had a couple of open ended questions:
Name one thing on Twitter you’d like to learn more about.
Ideas for 3rd quarter Twitter assignment?
I took these ideas and created our third quarter Twitter assignment. In this assignment, I also added some appendices to help address the results from above. For example, I created an appendix that walked students through three ways to see when people replied to them. They seemed to like the tutorial on how to use a RSS feed email alert to see when people replied to them.
The sample size was 59, or about 90% of my US History students. I used Google Docs to create a simple form for the students to fill out, it worked great.





April 30th, 2010 at 7:58 am
[...] on this, I decided to go back to some data that I had collected. After the first semester, I used Google Forms to poll students about the Twitter projects. One [...]