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How Social Media Can Help Students Study
With the right strategy, social media can make studying more collaborative and efficient.
One reason social media is so popular is that it allows people to personalize the way they experience and interact with the Web. Tools like Facebook, Twitter and Instagram used to be almost exclusively used to take a break from academics. But as our research has found, social media is also shaping the way students want to study and learn.
With that in mind, we've come up with some practical ideas to help students and teachers use social media for more personalized and collaborative studying.
Create a community: It's common for many students to be challenged by the same learning concept or course assignment. Social media can help centralize the collective knowledge of an entire class to make studying and communicating more efficient for everyone.
- Designate a course or study group hashtag, such as #Bio101Finals.
- Start a contact list or group for the class to collaborate and share study tips.
- Invite professors who use social media to follow the group conversation or join chats.
Remember that thousands of students everywhere are studying the same thing right now. Study networks don't have to be limited to students from just one school.
Continue the conversation: Starting a collaborative study network to tap into the group mind can save everyone time and effort.
- For missed classes or lectures, have someone stream or record the lecture on platforms such as Zoom, Microsoft Teams or Google Meet.
- Use one of those platforms to facilitate group study sessions.
- Follow or become a fan of the authors who wrote the books that are being used in your class.
- Ask questions to experts and influencers. Many are already on Twitter and LinkedIn.
Organize learning resources: Social media tools can help keep course information organized and accessible.
- Save, curate and share resources using collection-building tools such as Pinterest.
- If course documents aren't already posted online, use Google Drive, Box or Dropbox to gather study materials.
- Have classes use content services like Google Docs for team projects. This can make keeping organized and sharing notes much easier.
Supplement course materials: Social media can help identify additional content to reinforce or extend core instruction.
- Look for YouTube videos and playlists for extra learning on the most challenging topics.
- Follow existing subject-area hashtags
- Send video notes, questions, or reminders to your classmates.
- Search on all your social channels often for course topics, keywords and expert names—you never know what you'll find!
Social media no longer has to be an obstacle to studying. In fact, it can help students create and manage a study community, make the best use of study time, and find new resources to help them learn and retain knowledge. For more studying tips, tech tools and inspiration, visit the McGraw Hill Higher Education blog.
To see how schools around the country are using technology to make learning more accessible for all students, read our customer success stories: