Technology and the Internet are an integral part our digital age lives. Social networking platforms such as Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter are a big part of our daily lives. This is especially prevalent among teenagers, young adults, and adolescents. These people represent a significant proportion of the global 3.5 billion social-media users.

Online courses in digital marketing are available at the top universities around the world. Accelerate your career by earning Master’s degrees, Executive PGP and Advanced Certificate programs.

Social media projects are a great way to combine education and fun. Find out how social media tools can be used by students and academics to enhance learning and teach!

There are many communication tools and apps available to help students engage in class. Social media offers educators many opportunities to explore and discover innovative ways to integrate it into their classrooms. We have compiled some ideas for social media projects to help you get started.

Ideas for Social Media Projects
1. Facebook class group
This project aims to bring the classroom community online. Create a Facebook closed group for your class so all students can join it. It can be used as a digital bulletinboard for information such as homework assignments and submission dates.

Facebook accounts are used by a majority of college students (aged between 13 and 17) as well as school students. Their information consumption habits are changing daily in this technology-driven and fast-paced world. Online classes allow you to leverage social media’s advantages to improve your communication.

You can give students instructions about how to set up specific roles for their Facebook groups and the rules of engagement. The platform will allow students to gain insight into group dynamics and help them get started. It allows shy students to interact with others and participate in discussions. It can be used to facilitate academic exchanges and build a rich content archive. Facebook marketing is easy to learn.

2. Tweets that give a brief overview of a topic or event.
Twitter is known for its short posts. Twitter can be used for innovative summarizing projects. Ask students to sum up the main points and takeaways from readings or topics they are working on in class. They should be capable of understanding the text and organizing the points coherently.

Summaries are a great way to develop critical thinking skills that can be used throughout your career and education.

3. Yammer Brick-by-Brick Discussion
Yammer can be used for private communication within companies. This platform allows students to create a project where they can post questions, ideas, or insights about material that was covered in class. Students will also need to reply with meaningful comments to the posts. Only approved email addresses are allowed to join this network.

A scoring system can also be built using Yammer’s online interaction. Students should complete the exercise at minimum once to get a satisfactory score. Bonus points are given to students who comment more often.

Students will find it easier to engage in routine activities as well as reflect on the things they have learned.

4. Hashtag activism
For students interested in social justice and human rights, you could create a project-based activity.

Information and communication technologies can be used to spread awareness and highlight problems not adequately covered in mainstream media. Hashtag activism is focused on driving social-media traffic to often overlooked topics. Here are some examples from real life:

– ClimateStrike

– MeToo

– BlackLivesMatter

– WomensMarch

– UmbrellaRevolution

Your students can be asked to use social media to voice their opinion and create a hashtag campaign for a cause. This is how it will work:
– Choose a cause
– Choose the right hashtag and plan your messaging
– Promote your hashtag campaign on social media.
Learn how to strengthen your campaign with comments, likes, and follows
Analyze your hashtag’s impact and awareness.
Special prize for the best-performing campaign

5. Fake characters on Facebook
Literature classes have a common project component. All students are required to read and write about a specific book.
This idea can be improvised by incorporating social media.

Instead of giving students a standard book report, have them create a Facebook fan page featuring their favorite characters. The page will be unique and include a profile picture, description, a name, and a description.

Students can take on a group project to bring together the whole community. Students will be able to interact with their respective characters through the pages. Scout, Jem, & Atticus Finch (from To Kill a Mockingbird), could be seen commenting on one another’s Facebook posts.

This type of fun assignment can be a great way to get readers to read the text deeper and encourage creativity.

6. Research on social media
This project will help you write a social media research paper. Every step of the process will revolve around social media networks such as Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.

The globalization of technology and the development in communication networks have brought people closer together. Fake news and information sharing are two of the new challenges that technology has brought. Fake news could be used to propagandize governments, exploit businesses, or provoke sentiments in the community. It is urgent that online information be verified.

Below are some key takeaways.
– How to navigate social media’s complex terrain
– How to search for information via social networks
– How to tell the difference between expert opinions and everyday thoughts
– How to distinguish between propaganda and legitimate news

7. YouTube Film Festival
This project requires that you create a short film, then upload it to YouTube. Students may create animations, or film original footage. They then create a video between 5-10 minutes that looks like a short movie. After receiving all submissions, it is possible to organize a screening with parents and faculty. This project has the added benefit of allowing creations to be shared online, which can help garner more attention and accolades.

8. YouTube channel for EdTech
This popular social media project aims to simplify complex concepts by using visual media. A task can be created in which participants must create explainer videos using sound, text, and moving images.

It will be very similar to creating slides in PowerPoint. You can present complicated procedures and abstract topics effectively with the help of animations and audio narration.

YouTube allows you to create playlists that are subject-specific and organize your content. You can take a cue form ed-tech channels like TED-Ed and Edutopia, which present complex topics in a concise, professional, and easy-to-understand manner. In the last few decades, such teaching videos have become a major part of the e-learning community.

9. SoundCloud Informational Podcast
Podcasts are a great way to learn and listen. Here’s a great idea for a student project: host an educational podcast via audio distribution platforms like SoundCloud. This can be a great activity to improve your oratory and articulation skills.

It can be thought of as an online radio station. It can be a topic such as Gaming, Mythology, Entrepreneurship, but you can also share general tips like studying, mindfulness, and more. Here are some ideas to inspire your creativity:

Tips to avoid distractions and build concentration
– How do you work together and independently?
How to manage stress when there is too much going on
Fun ideas to build team spirit

Your audio series can now be subscribed by your listeners so they can access it via their smartphones, computers, and other internet connected devices. Podcasts are time-efficient and offer insight into real-life experiences.

10. Latest news
Social media can be a great tool to keep up-to-date about new developments and other information. You can get stories in real time, interact with other users, share content you like, and receive them all. An example of a news update project is collating weekly insights from various social media platforms.

You can now follow almost any news or media company’s social media pages to receive live updates. You can also connect with celebrities, politicians, or other notable personalities.

11. Interactive tools for online polls
Online polls are an interactive feature on platforms like Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. This tool allows users to poll their followers on their opinions and preferences.

Online polls also make it easy for educators to include democratic decision-making and align learning objectives. This tool is also great for students who want to experiment with designing large surveys for their data collection projects.

12. Vocabulary exercises for Instagram
In traditional classrooms, students are provided with practice worksheets that they can use to write or draw their answers. Technology has given homework an entirely new dimension.

Social media allows tutors to be creative, especially in the area of vocabulary revision. They can make daily “Word of the Day” posts on their websites. They can also use “story”, or share the Word/Meaning in different posts. Users can tap or swipe to find the answer.

13. Tweets about geographic locations
This project illustrates how to use Twitter and Google Maps to learn interactive geography. To ask for challenges on Twitter, you can use your network of followers to allow users to submit locations via Geo-tweets. Ask students to use Google Maps to locate these locations.

14. Encourage student creators
Your students can become online reporters and provide extensive event coverage via social media platforms. This project will require them to design a social campaign that promotes a forthcoming event. They can also share live updates and then post detailed online coverage. They will be encouraged to take initiative and learn new skills through this activity-based learning approach.

15. Student of Week
This project will highlight the talents in your classroom. Every student will be unique in their interests and personality. A weekly feature can be created that highlights the best performing students in different categories. It could include a brief bio and a picture. This can be done using a social-media template. Share the best content possible and highlight the positive sides of each post.

16. Globalizing projects
Learning communities can now build relationships with international academicians, companies, and institutions through social media. You can collaborate with other people around the world by sharing your work, findings, and activities. The practice of learning and sharing with others opens up many opportunities to learn, innovate, and conduct research.

This allows you to collaborate on educational projects with international partners via social media and thus facilitate cross-cultural ideas exchange.

17. Guidelines for responsible behavior and digital citizenship education
Social media are a powerful tool for expression. Virtual interactions can be misused, as with all technology. It is crucial to teach students about issues like cyber-bullying.

Another project idea is to help students think logically about online life and to understand their roles in it. To help you understand the concept better, you can create a guideline on acceptable social networking conduct and provide examples.

Social media projects have many benefits

– Enhancing digital literacy skills
– Improve knowledge retention and comprehension, as social media is slowly changing our way of consuming information
– Increase student participation, collaboration, motivation
– Building better community connections and global classrooms
– Demonstrating how online communities work and members behavior
Enhancing students’ presentation and writing skills
– Exploring images and video content in addition to text
Information about best practices in social media and how to conduct yourself online
– Nurturing leadership qualities and activism
– Online interactions and activities that allow students to display their personalities
– Improving attitudes of students towards course content
– Teaching students about ICT’s knowledge-building benefits

The job market and social media

Smartphones and other internet-connected devices have made it easy to be “social”. Social media skills are an essential part of 21st century marketing jobs.
Many organizations employ social media managers in order to develop their online strategy, post content, and measure the effectiveness of specific campaigns.

The industry is also seeing a rise in demand for social-media specialists, regardless of whether it’s small businesses or large corporations. Social media can be used to increase visibility for startups and entrepreneurial ventures, as well as traditional methods.

Author

  • arthurmacdonald

    Arthur Macdonald is a 39-year-old educational blogger and school teacher. He has been a teaching assistant for 10 years, and has taught middle and high school students in the Atlanta area for the past 5 years.