Using Twitter as a Professional Tool 

Boyda Johnstone (@boydajosa)

Basics of Twitter

  • hashtags: links to broader conversations
  • direct messages: who uses those?
  • new "Moments" tab: easier to access events
  • most "successful" tweets include a photo, perhaps screenshot with broader text
  • when to RT? when not to RT?
  • can now embed tweets

Analytics 

Using Tweetdeck

Who to Follow?

  • hashtags: #phdchat, #withaPhD, #altac, #gradgrind, #postac, #medievaltwitter
  • Generalist academic accounts: @thesiswhisperer, @researchwhisperer, @timeshighered, @chronicle, @chroniclevitae, @dissertating, @WriteThatPhD, @AcademicPain, Shit Academics Say (@AcademicsSay), PhD Comics (@PhDComics)

  • "Semipublic intellectuals" in your own field: medieval: @jeffreyjcohen, @JonathanHsy, @dorothyk98
    other: Natalia Cecire (@ncecire), Lee Skallerup (@readywriting), Aimee Morrison (@digiwonk), Cory Robin (@CoryRobin), Jennifer Polk (@FromPhDtoLife)

Tweeting at Conferences

Pros: 

  • ​draws you into intellectual conversation
  • new perspectives
  • cross-currents with other concurrent panels
  • developing a voice in a low-stakes space
  • making connections, leveling hierarchies
  • practical considerations: alertness, mnemonic aids, critical/analytic skills
  • follow conversation remotely or after-the-fact

Tweeting at Conferences

Cons: 

  • ​not everyone has a Twitter account
  • privileges a certain type of learner, and a certain type of personality
  • NSA.
  • not necessarily an accurate record

Tweeting at Conferences

Best Practices, in 6 steps: 

  1. always include attribution (name, conference hashtag, session hashtag)
  2. don't overtweet
  3. listen to other tweeters
  4. think about representation 
  5. don't sacrifice complexity for simplicity
  6. aim for both general and specific elements

Twitter Talk

By Boyda Josa

Twitter Talk

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