maanantai 14. maaliskuuta 2016

Social media is a very big part of our everyday life and that's so it is good topic for an essay. Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and Google are very popular social media corporations and they are used a lot at schools too. Here are some facts which should make teachers and parents to think about threats and possibilites of social media. This academic text was missing at first but now it's here.



Social media and education

Social media is a big part of everyday life nowadays. It is used constantly and sometimes it seems that it has us under control more than we have control of it. Social media has changed the ways of communicating, thinking, learning and expressing oneself. Nevertheless it hasn’t found its place in school systems or education in general. We think that social media is only full of entertainment and it can be used only to watch cat videos or sharing posts with our friends, even though it can be so much more. Social media is seen more as a threat to education than an opportunity to find new forms of teaching and learning.  This essay will consider what social media could offer to education and on the other hand how it can harm the traditional ways of teaching.
Social media has changed people in many ways. Because of social media, people have multiple ways to connect with each other: friends, family or strangers from all over the world. It has made communicating more global than ever before. Internet and social media channels like Google, Wikipedia, Instagram, Youtube, Facebook and Twitter have given immediate access to information (Tommy Landry, 2014). There’s no need to struggle to find a certain fact, just google it, and the information will be found in many forms: text, picture, video you name it. Consequently way of thinking has also changed. Because there’s no necessity to work for finding information people want to take the easy way out. Why to go to the library, read a book and waste hours to find a fact if you can find it in seconds from the internet. Because of social media’s global nature it is easier for a singular person to be herd world widely. Just a single post from channels like Facebook or Twitter can spread quickly all over the world. It’s like Tommy Landry (2014) said in his article: “It is far easier to do something remarkable and noticeable, and have it reach people across the planet, than it has been at any time in our history. We now have truly globalized voices. What a privilege”.
But how could this global, communicative and interactive information bank be harmful to learning and education in general? Social media encourages it’s users to be online all the time. Students have familiarized to use their smart phones during classes that effects on their concentration. You “have to be” online, check Facebook posts and take pictures to Instagram if you want to know what’s happening in your social circle or broadly in the world. This is not just teenager’s problem, like some educators like to think. This concerns everyone: students from elementary school to universities, educators and teachers. It is hard to focus on dull and blunt class when social media offers so much more interesting things and information. Social media is addictive and it can seriously have an influence on student’s and teacher’s concentration.
The other question that worries educators is that how safe social media really is for a child or a teenager. Many channels offer a favorable platform to cyber bullying and other kind of discrimination. Quantity of friends, followers, posts, pictures and likes may sound quite small and insignificant things, but those things can encourage to cyberbullying. Bullying in social media is often invisible to teachers and parents. Only the ones involved know about it, it’s hard to spot and hard to interfere with. “While social networking sites provide a way for students and teachers to connect, they can be a weapon of malicious behavior--even on college campuses.” (Karen Lederer, 2012) These disadvantages mentioned are only a few of all the struggles social media could cause to education. Although many of them can be demolished when teachers, educators and schools in general know how to control social media in a beneficial way, learn more about it and open their minds also to the positive effects.
The most important thing that all the educators should realize is that learning doesn’t limit to a classroom. Learning is a lifelong process that doesn’t require a certain place or environment, it happens everywhere all the time, subconsciously or consciously. It’s also important to be aware of that “learning is not just studying a textbook but also interaction and communication” (Keerti Arora, 2013). In the best circumstances social media can make learning and teaching fun, effective and interesting. It can make an ordinary class global and interactive and encourage even the shyest student to participate. Social media is an effective way to build better communication skills and increase student engagement (Karen Lederer, 2012). All the students at this day have enormously information about social media, its use and channels. The reason why social media still hasn’t found its place in educating is mainly because it’s a totally new phenomenon and technology to most of the teachers, and it is understandable because social media didn’t exist when they went to school.
It goes without saying that social media definitely has its pros and cons, although the solution is not to rule it out or on the other hand let it control education. A middle ground should be found. Social media is here to stay and new generations should learn about its disadvantages and dangers at school, while it’s used as an effective part of educating. Educators shouldn’t see it as monster that ruins the traditional ways of learning and teaching, on the contrary social media should be seen as a way to improve and revolutionize education.


List of references:

Campus technology: Pros and Cons of Social Media in the Classroom http://campustechnology.com/articles/2012/01/19/pros-and-cons-of-social-media-in-the-classroom.aspx  Karen Lederer, January 19th 2012

EdTechRewiew:  Social Media in Education: Pros and Cons

Business 2 community: How Social Media Has Changed Us: The Good and The Bad, Tommy Landry September 5th 2014

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