Never give up the opportunity to say something great about our school. #spsleads pic.twitter.com/kpURivieS7— Joe Sanfelippo (@Joe_Sanfelippo) July 25, 2017
Sanfelippo's not alone. Supt Daniel Frazier has put together a list of more than 1500 Tweeting supts. When the person in charge takes seriously the power of telling our own stories staff start to follow suit.
However, they also need guidance. When educators share and celebrate successes, they serve as role models. It's important to provide some direction on what to keep in mind when posting to social media.
Guidance On Posting Like A Role Model
Remember the Golden Rule
- Praise and celebrate publicly, advise or criticize privately
Help others be better
- Ask yourself this: After people read our posts, are they better than when they started to read? If so, post freely. If not reconsider. More on this at this post from Cool Cat Teacher Vicki Davis
Be consistent
- Remember to convey your brand / image
Tag
- Tag people (with permission)
- Places
Hashtag
- Know the right hashtags
- Limit hashtags to one or two for more engagement
- Tweets with more than two hashtags have less engagement
Use Images
- Posts with images draw more attention
- They are twice as likely to have engagement
- Use original images
Include Links
- Tweets with links receive a higher retweet rate
- Let's people know where they can learn more
Post Accessibly
- Use alt text for images
- Use plain language
- Use camel case for hashtags First letter of each word in caps i.e. #EdTech
This is excellent advice Lisa. Do you think it important to define your audience before posting? I guess the world is your audience in a sense, but should you reflect upon who the reader might be in any way?
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