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Classroom tales: A diary

Teacher Identity 2.0

The mom of a former student of mine started following me on Twitter today. It was a surprise and presents a bit of a conundrum. On the one hand, up to this point I’ve mainly used Twitter to share inane updates (Quest for a Niners bar has finally come to an end.) and funny/interesting headlines (RT@TheOnion Friendship Between Caterpillar, Horse Exploited for Cheap Children’s Book http:/onion.com/5iCtj4) with friends. At the same time, it’s become increasingly clear that Twitter is not the place for privacy.

Still, while I’ve worked to maintain an appropriate public image on Twitter, I still hoped to keep it a personal space. Connecting with parents (and eventually students presumably) ends that, and blurs the space between my professional and personal realms. To paraphrase George Constanza, “My worlds are colliding!”

It seems simple enough to block this woman and any other professional contacts from following me. I just worry about her taking offense since she’s already started following me. Maybe someone with a better knowledge of Twitter can tell me whether she will have any way of noticing she’s not getting my Tweets?

Regardless of how I solve the problem, it’s definitely a new problem characteristic of the new era teaching is entering. Beyond all the political changes teaching is undergoing, it is also transforming at a rapid pace as technology evolves. I’ve found technology can provide exciting new opportunities such as the class web site I’ve used to post nightly homework, encourage parent-teacher communication and post video lessons. But it can also be unsettling, as in the case where a former student, only in the 5th grade, messages me on Facebook.

It’s not exactly groundbreaking news, but it is clear the internet is breaking down barriers between public and private identities. It will be interesting to see how that affects the “dual” identities that are common among teachers.

  • http://rabuteau.blog.ouestjob.com/ Veronique

    I think I can understand these legitimate questions. Your Twitter account can be private and you are absolutly not obliged to answer on Facebook (your student is not a ‘friend’). And, apart of the fact that we have to assume entirely our identities online, for a teacher, yes, it may be complicated. But I’m glad to read the way you share your knowledge online, trying to help and encourage communication too.
    All the best.

  • John Hancock

    Ruben,

    I applaud your use of technology to share important information but I must offer a twittercism. As someone who teaches media literacy I can tell you that twitter is not very secure. You cannot actually block someone like facebook (which I have other thoughts on). Even with a block a person can

    Read your timeline
    Send you @replies, which are still visible to everybody else, and remain within Twitter search, and will be delivered to you if you have a search for your replies configured on Seesmic Desktop or TweetDeck
    Re-tweet your messages, which can give the impression to others that you are ‘friends’

    This is just to name a few. Twitter is still a 1.0 program. My suggestion is to use RSS Feeds to get your information out. I think it is great you use your website for school stuff but Tweeting has some major flaws. One goal of technology is to find the best medium for the message. Twitter is not it in my opinion

  • Kelly

    Why not just email her and explain that while you acknowledge that your Twitter account is public, you feel it’s most appropriate to keep certain channels for professional communication and others for personal communication? If you phrase it right, I’m sure she’ll understand. I told my students that I will not accept their FB friend requests until they are headed to college, and only then for the purpose of knowing how they are doing. It’s still fully at my discretion. No one so far has had a problem with that.

    Keep in mind, though, that Twitter accounts archive somewhere or other, and I’ve heard several stories of people’s Twitter feeds (even those they thought were private) being found through the archives. So the fact that someone is not your “follower” doesn’t mean they aren’t reading your feed. I’m not a Twitter user, so I don’t know the details, but this is my understanding and something to check.

  • http://filthyteaching.blogspot.com The Reflective Educator

    “the ‘dual’ identities that are common among teachers.”  

    So true.  Perhaps, in some ways, technology is helping to make teaching more of a lifestyle than simply a profession.

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