As we were about 6-7 twitterers at the conference (which had an attendance of about 600 people) we established an unofficial backchannel through the use of the #icde2009 hashtag. I found the use of the backchannel quite interesting, because it added an aspect of interactivity, which was often lacking during the sessions themselves, especially the plenary sessions.
I also made a Slideshare Event page for the conference, where I tried to gather all presentations that were available online. I think conference organisers should encourage participants to publish and share their presentations before or during their presentation (Great example set by Terry Anderson).
Just today @timbuckteeth (Steve Wheeler) pointed out this article on the use of Twitter as a backchannel. I try to embed the article in my blog, so enjoy.
More than just passing notes in class? The Twitter-enabled backchannel
2 comments:
Thanks for great tweeting during the conference and a good blogpost that sums it all up in a really good way!
I had the same experience, it added lots of interactivity which was interesting - by the way, I saw other people watching Twitter on their laptop who didn't participate in the hashtag.
Let's hope that we'll have 10-15 twitter users using the backchannel actively in the next DE conference.
Now it's time to get ready to the 32 hour journey home..
You may also be interested in Reinhardt, W., Ebner, M., Beham, G., Costa, C. (2009) How People are Using Twitter during Conferences, Hornung-Prähauser, V., Luckmann, M. (Ed.), 5th EduMedia conference, Salzburg, p. 145-156 ...
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