See on Scoop.it – Blogging For Business
Anne Marie Cunningham (@amcunningham) writes:
‘”My very first tweet was made in May 2008.
preparing for a seminar on medicine and the media- thinking about health 3.0″
— AnneMarie Cunningham (@amcunningham) May 27, 2008
I was invited to join Twitter by a friend who works in IT. It just happens that at the time I was still at work thinking about a teaching session so my first tweet has quite a strong medical education flavour.
Like many people I wasn’t sure what to actually make of Twitter after this and I left it for several months until I went to two medical education conferences and decided that social media could serve a purpose for me.
But I’m not a techno-evangelist. I believe we have to be very careful about how we use technology and to consider how it impacts on relationships.
If you google web 2 (a term for newer social technologies including social media) sceptic then the top result is actually about me, because I have disputed with other doctors in the past that these technologies are having any impact on our clinical practice. And I am still uncertain about this.
However I am certain, and have decided that I can allow myself to be evangelical, about the benefits that can be had for anyone who is at this conference and is therefore interested in improving medical education. I started becoming aware of this a short while after starting my own blog in October 2008 which is why in 2009 I gave a presentation at [the Association for the Study of Medical Educaton Annual Scientific Meeting] ASME about how social media and networks could develop and support scholarship in medical education. However, this did not lead to the expected paradigm shift in scholarly communication. So I have decided that I might need to be a little more direct with you this time. And this is why I am going to give you 10 reasons why you should be on Twitter now.’
See on wishfulthinkinginmedicaleducation.blogspot.co.uk
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