Last week Jane Bozarth and Cammy Bean posted a terrific parody of what Abraham Lincoln’s Facebook page might look like. While Lincoln’s Facebook template is well-done and humorous, it also serves as a history refresher by including popular, and lesser-known facts, about Lincoln.
For example, are you familiar with all the references in the page:
Did you know Lincoln took on the town bully in a wrestling match and won both the match as well as the respect of the town?
I love this one. It’s a great summary and partly explains why Lee turned down Lincoln’s offer to lead the Union.
I don’t remember learning about Joshua Speed when I went to school, but he’s certainly part of Lincoln history today.
Friends? Really?
And of course this famous quote refers to Lincoln’s unwillingness to emancipate the slaves.
Lincoln’s depression was well documented.
Facebook templates and educational role playing
Okay, so you get the point. Rather than listing Lincoln’s history in a page or two in a text book, the information is presented using multiple voices, perspectives and formats. It’s more of a conversation than a history book, yet it’s the same information one would expect on a mid-term.
How great would it be for teachers to have similar platforms in their schools to use for educational role play? Teachers could use the pages to engage their students on any subject while using a medium familiar and engaging to students.
Centralized role play
Teachers could set up their own Facebook pages for course topics and assume the “voice” of the page, while students interact with the teacher through the application.
Using the Lincoln example, the teacher would role play as Lincoln, posting comments, quotes and status updates while students would “wall-to-wall” and interact with the teacher through the page .
This is already done in most online classes using Blackboard where students are required to post two or more replies to other students’ posts. The difference here is the content is presented in a more creative modality than a Blackboard thread.
Decentralized role play
In this model, students create and maintain their own page for research topics. The topic could be a historical person, similar to the Lincoln example, or it could anthropomorphize a place or event such as a country, product, economic policy and so on.
Students could also interact with each other’s “pages” and grades could be based on anything from participation to quality of posts.
Offline Facebook templates and workbooks
I get it – most schools won’t have access to their own Facebook technology, or won’t feel comfortable using the live Facebook for classes.
But that doesn’t mean creative teachers couldn’t create generic Facebook activity sheets for students.
I ran the Lincoln example through my Photoshop sanitizer (rectangular marquee and foreground fill) to create an empty, blank Facebook page.
A possible assignment could be to complete the worksheet for a historical event or person using content learned in class or researched on their own.
After a period of time, students could exchange their work with each other and continue the assignment.
What would they include on the blank worksheets?
Students could be asked to provide content from multiple perspectives such as:
- First person updates (what kinds of updates and comments would they make?)
- Second person (who do they interact with? who would post on their page? why?)
- Quotes (from, for, about the person)
- Groups (what groups would they join and why?)
- Links (what links would they share?)
- Friends (who are they?)
- Flamers (who wouldn’t be accepted as a friend and why?)
Or maybe I’m over-thinking all of this and it’s really just a creative parody?
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Facebook for Learning Resources
Educause:
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ELI7025.pdf
Facebook Group:
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=6726749007
Facebook as a Learning Platform:
http://elearningtech.blogspot.com/2007/10/facebook-as-learning-platform.html
25 Facebook Apps that are Perfect for Online Education:
http://www.collegedegree.com/library/college-life/15-facebook-apps-perfect-for-online-education
Facebook Learning:
http://www.jarche.com/2008/10/facebook-learning/
I’m majoring in Facebook, how about you:
http://money.cnn.com/2007/10/08/magazines/fortune/blakely_facebook.fortune/index.htm
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Update:
A K12 teacher just offered her students a President’s Day extra credit opportunity.
Their task: Create a Facebook page for any American President. Awesome!
She further identifies the learning standards addressed in the assignment:
- Writing
- Research skills
- Making connections and drawing conclusions
- Determining point of view
- Interpreting quotes
- Interacting with technology
Good luck Anna and please feel free to share any experiences you can.
Tracy Boyer says
This is such a great idea! Incorporating Facebook with history would certainly retain student’s attention more than a boring history book. I wish my teachers had done this for me! (then again, I was in grade school 10+ years before facebook was born, haha) Thanks for sharing!
Tracy Boyer’s last blog post..Broadcast journalism ethics need to change
Cammy Bean says
David,
(All the credit for discovering this goes to Jane Bozarth, who tweeted it.)
I would have loved this kind of assignment as a kid. Great idea!
Cammy Bean’s last blog post..Instructional Design: What’s in a name?
David Anderson says
Thanks Cammy. I added Jane as a reference.
That’s the great thing about sharing – if you miss something good on one site, it will most likely show up on another.
Busy Teacher says
Great (and modern) way to provide some insights into a well-known person’s life!
PS: is it only me who thinks that there is a strong trend recently that involves teaching through presenting old (and sometimes boring) facts in a humorous and ‘fresh’ way?
Yakaraju G says
Such a wonderful idea!
Given a example to learn from Facebook template, which was very interactive way and asking the students to create a Facebook page for any historical person, by research about them and present it using a blank Facebook template. I liked the whole idea because, it is like a game play and accessing Facebook in real time.
Thank you @David for this post and @Jane Bozarth and @Cammy Bean for this template
Medvim team says
A wonderfull idea. This make me remember the history 😀
Video History Channel – Abraham Lincoln Biography – Documentary