I used to post weekly collections of my best tweets, and used Storify to bring them together.
Unfortunately, Storify went under.
Fortunately, however, Wakelet was a new tool that was able to import all of a person’s Storifys. So you can see all those previous Twitter “Best” lists here.
You might also be interested in MY MOST POPULAR TWEETS IN 2019 – PART TWO.
I don’t want to risk putting all the work into those posts again and risk losing them all.
So, instead of creating weekly “Best” lists of tweets, I’m going to use Twitter analytics to determine my most popular ones and embed them directly here in posts. That way, the only way they’d go away would be if Twitter itself went out of business.
So, here are my most popular tweets from the past thirty days or so:
ELL educators u want 2 follow during 2020 & beyond: @MsSalvac @TanELLclassroom @ValentinaESL @emilyfranESL @Toppel_ELD @carlota_holder @Jechev @michelleshory @irina_mcgrath @JennyVo15 @CindyGarciaTX
@stfleenor & ELL tchr Twitter list https://t.co/ylL6cJcNvy— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) December 17, 2019
I'm a big fan of the Picture Word Inductive Model, which I use with ELL Beginners. See The Best Ways To Use Photos In Lessons https://t.co/VTQsoyyFiF #Together4ELs
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) December 6, 2019
And this holds true in the classroom, too. When we are sharp with a student or mistakenly accuse a student of inappropriate behavior, it’s important to model a public apology https://t.co/SXkyrR95P6
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) December 21, 2019
I’d love to hear about how teachers of English Language Learners have applied interleaving in their classes https://t.co/pKgx08lx06
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) December 15, 2019
I learn a lot from these educators & would encourage you to do so, too, if u are not already following them: @TchKimPossible @DulceFlecha @biblio_phile @rickwormeli2 @DrYemiS @ddmeyer @Ready4rigor @WhiteRhinoRay @ShanaVWhite @DingleTeach @mochamomma
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) December 21, 2019
I think this is the best piece I've seen anyway on assessment accommodations for ELLs
Great work, @TanELLclassroom ! https://t.co/k5RsrmOT0Q
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) December 8, 2019
New Curriculum For Teaching Online Information Literacy Looks Fantastic! https://t.co/Grh0AgpK9K Great work, @samwineburg
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) December 5, 2019
If you want to keep updated on important education-related research, u want to follow @cara__jackson @matt_barnum @dylanwiliam @DTWillingham @Paul__Bruno @YoukiTerada @KiraboJackson @MatthewAKraft @TravisJBristol @mindmannered
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) December 21, 2019
Here's my new article in @ELmagazine : Research in Action: Ramping Up Support for Long-Term ELLs – Educational Leadership https://t.co/AkCTlcC6j7
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) December 9, 2019
There are nearly 500 ELL/ESL educators from around the world on this Twitter list & it has nearly 900 subscribers. Follow it and/or let me know if you'd like to be added (please only if you often tweet about ELL issues) https://t.co/ylL6cJuon6
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) December 21, 2019
You can’t beat students surprising you with a birthday celebration and then they tweet about it 🤤 https://t.co/mjydRXfFHG
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) December 13, 2019
Here’s my new piece in The Washington Post: A teacher assesses the past decade in K-12 education — and makes 9 predictions for the 2020s – The Washington Post https://t.co/Sdw5FHtook
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) December 26, 2019
I like the "Three-Two-One" Speaking Strategy: Using a "Three-Two-one" Speaking Activity https://t.co/EmcQqs6tKd #Together4ELs
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) December 6, 2019
Recent Comments