Thursday, May 29, 2008

Micro-blogging with Twitter at the e-State Symposium with my BlackBerry

As I posted earlier today, I attended the e-State Symposium at Champlain and decided to take my new Blackberry for a spin and really use Twitter as a micro-blogging tool.

My results I think were good. At least from my perspective. I was able to text about many of the main themes, a former student twittered back to see if he could use the quotes in a social networking session he was conducting today and I picked up three more followers, got picked on by Bill Simmon at CandleBlog (yes, Bill, that "woman" behind you was me!), and had a great chat with Cathy Resmer which ended up on Blurt.

Neat results.

By the way, you can see all my "Twits" or is it "Tweets" in the sidebar here in my blog. You be the judge...useful or just annoying?

Ask my sister about it and she will say that when she got to her phone this afternoon, it was a bit crazy -- 30+ twitter alerts would make anyone lose their minds. Her text to me that stated "ENOUGH ALREADY" clearly pointed out that I must consider the importance of "Twitiquette". Netiquette is just not enough anymore.

Perhaps I should have sent out a warning last night via Twitter: "Warning, I will be using Twitter to live micro-blog at a conference tomorrow. If you do not want 30+alerts, you might want to turn notifications off!" Hmmm...lesson learned.

As to my take aways from the symposium?

Well it was an interesting group of people -- diverse in age and background, but I don't really think enough was done to pull in a larger group of people who would really add to the discussion. I would have liked to see representation from other stakeholders to add depth. Where were the community activists, the African American community members, refugee groups, rural advocates, etc? At the end of the day I'm not sure we had good enough cross cultural and diverse socio-economic points of view to really get at the opportunities and challenges. It felt very "Chittenden County" and "Montpelier" to me. Not really representative of the state as a whole.

It was also too much, too fast. But I won't write more than that. Bill Simmon summed that part up quite nicely.

What I did like was the passion that everyone brought -- people really care about creating community -- and see the opportunity that technology can have to help enhance and support community building efforts. And, the Snelling Center has created a WIKI where they will provide updates.

My final thought on this was the continuing challenge to EDUCATE. It's not just about educating high school students and college students. It's about each of us embracing the fact that learning never ends, that our jobs are to learn and help others learn -- especially when it comes to integrating different forms of technology into any type of process. Case in point was the fact that there were people who didn't know what Twitter was. Not surprising. Many people don't know what it is -- perhaps more know now because of what I did today (and for those of you who are unsure -- check out this video from my favorite "how-to" site, CommonCraft):

http://www.commoncraft.com/Twitter

In my small way I have provided a learning opportunity for myself AND for other conference attendees.

But that does beg the question -- do all of the people who really need to be involved in the process of helping Vermont to become an "e-State" (in other words a community that is connected through many means, including technology) even know what a WIKI is? AND...do they understand how to use one?

CommonCraft to the rescue!

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ha! I had no idea it was you sitting behind me. It was like you were twittering in the real world, just for me! :)

Karyn Vogel said...

Hi Elaine, It was great to have you join us at the symposium. I have enjoyed reading your posts on the event! I was just re-reading everything and noticed your link to the wiki video. It's great! I am going to let others know about it and see if it helps break down that wiki wall for some people.

We have several action teams forming and we'd love to have you join one if you are interested. You would be a great asset to any of our groups, from economic & workforce development to equity & access. Please keep in touch!

Karyn

Carson said...

I think using twitter as a micro-blogging tool is an interesting idea.