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>>Michael: I think social media, it really directly helps the students see
that school is not this classroom.
School is the world, and so when you have direct links to that world,
then they understand the power of learning.
>>Pam: I got people that are walking into Albemarle County virtually
and working with teachers, and as Superintendent, I don't have this mote
around the school division anymore that determines who gets to come or go,
and then I started realizing that what people were doing was sharing resources,
they were asking questions, they were engaging in interacting
around the work of learning.
>>Karen: This part will be the Colosseum.
>>As a classroom teacher, I'm lucky
to know what other grade levels are doing some of the time,
much less what are teachers in other schools doing.
So what we do is connect with Twitter a lot.
I think a lot of the ideas that I come back and share
with kids, I saw on Twitter.
>>Pam: Social media catches on in schools in the same way that it catches
on in the bigger world, that it's kind of word of mouth.
So you may have a teacher that does something in a faculty meeting
on how they use Twitter, and the next thing you know that teacher is sitting
around with five or six other teachers that're saying, "Hey, how do I get on?"
>>Michael: We formed a nice little tight group with people
within Albemarle County that use Twitter,
and so we pretty consistently will Tweet each other directly
to see what the other person is doing.
So a hashtag that we use throughout the district would be hashtag ACPS.
It's kind of a slow process at first.
You kind of send these Tweets out.
You're really sending Tweets to no one because you have
like ten followers or something.
But then, you know, people start to pay attention,
and luckily if you follow people that follow you, that have a lot
of followers, they will promote you to certain ways.
>>Pam: One day, I'm just, you know, watching my Tweet feed,
and I notice this Twitter feed from Michael Thornton, and it pops up,
and then he's got a picture of his kids having built this tower.
>>Student: I think it's just the ones that have come too close
to ripping that are the problem.
>>Student: Yeah.
>>Michael: So they're given 20 sheets of paper.
They take that paper, they can fold it how they want to use it,
but they can't use glue, they can't use tape.
And the goal to see is how high you can actually build the paper tower.
I Tweeted out the initial pictures from it,
and just kind of explained what it was.
>>Pam: And then the next thing I know, I see another teacher who's kind of taken
on the challenge, and she's posted a picture
of her kids' tower with them just beaming!
>>Michael: The response was positive right away.
So I then said, "You know what?
I'll create a Google Doc that people could actually then do the challenge
and then throw their picture into the Google Doc."
>>Pam: Next thing you know, we've got somebody up in Chicago,
we've got somebody in neighboring Nelson County, they've built a tower.
You just start to see these ideas that seed,
and then you've got connections all over the place.
>>Michael: Hello!
Hey, welcome!
>>Beyond just the four walls that are in this classroom, and with their teacher
or their parents, they can share it with a classes in Chicago,
or classes in Ireland, or across the world.
And that's really important to them, because truly,
what they're doing, as we know, matters.
>>Pam: What if you don't think about the boundaries
of your school district as being a limiter.
What if you want your teachers, your Principals, your Central Office staff,
even your kids to have opportunities to cross-pollinate across the boundaries
of school districts, then all
of a sudden social media makes learning come alive in incredibly powerful ways.