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Tony Breu
@
tony_breu
Boston, MA
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Hospitalist and Director of Resident Education, VA Boston. Faculty, @HMSbioethics. Mets fan. Usually at #AMreport and thinking about #TWDFNR. Views are my own.
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6.438
Tweetovi
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763
Pratim
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31.875
Osobe koje vas prate
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Cait Moss, MD
@moss_caitlyn
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11 h |
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VA Chief @reesezach3 gave a nice talk today on the use of thickened liquids and how we may actually cause harm by using them. @AdamRodmanMD, I finally caved and tried them...the apple juice wasn’t the worst thing but the water was not so great. 🥴@BostonChiefs #medtwitter #SLP pic.twitter.com/kmP6r9I1Ku
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VA Joint Chiefs
@BostonChiefs
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21 h |
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What are we giving our patients when we order a ‘nectar thick’ diet?
For #AMreport, @reesezach3 lets us find out! We taste test thickened liquids- water, apple juice, and cranberry juice!
While this diet ⬇️aspirating food, it won’t ⬇️aspiration of saliva or reflux! #MedEd pic.twitter.com/NTKttTVEEa
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Tony Breu
@tony_breu
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3. velj |
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But, don’t I need to crop after the fact?
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Nathan Varady
@nathanvarady
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3. velj |
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Unless some other unclear benefit, Cmd+shift+4 will save you a couple steps on your screen clipping (can paste straight into ppt). If you actually want the image saved to downloads, can have it do so automatically.
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Elliot Tapper
@ebtapper
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2. velj |
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No one is born an expert.
#tweetorial is a great way to learn. For example, I knew nothing about vibrio vulnificus. It was very fun to dive deep. It took a very long time.
Same is true for writing review articles. When published, u r likely one of the 🌍 experts on that topic
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Tony Breu
@tony_breu
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2. velj |
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Agreed. It is always a good idea to post about things you know very well.
My interest is in exploring exactly those things I DON’T know well. Then tweeting about what I have found.
That may not be the route everyone takes.
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Tony Breu
@tony_breu
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2. velj |
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Same results?
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Tony Breu
@tony_breu
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2. velj |
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That concludes Part II of "How does one create a Tweetorial?".
Part III will be posted soon.
Here is a link to Part I
twitter.com/tony_breu/stat…
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Tony Breu
@tony_breu
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2. velj |
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21/
I am sure others (both creating and consumers of Tweetorials) have recommendations.
I'd love to hear them!
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Tony Breu
@tony_breu
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2. velj |
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20/
If you plan to do more than one Tweetorials:
📌Compile them
This allows others to access them easily so they don't get "lost".
I have made moments and pinned them to my account, but this isn’t the only method.
twitter.com/tony_breu/stat…
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Tony Breu
@tony_breu
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2. velj |
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19/
What's most important is that you keep your readers' attention. I find that:
📌Shorter is often better
To modify a famous quote: "If I had more time, I would have written a shorter Tweetorial.”
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Tony Breu
@tony_breu
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2. velj |
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18/
Regarding the number of tweets in each Tweetorial, there is no right answer. But:
📌Be mindful of length
I’m not sure there is a correct number of tweets. A prior survey suggested 12 might be optimal, but this is far from certain.
twitter.com/tony_breu/stat…
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Tony Breu
@tony_breu
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2. velj |
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17/
As you may know, all links use 23 characters no matter their length.
So, there is no need to use URL shortening sites like Bitly.
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Tony Breu
@tony_breu
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2. velj |
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16/
On the issue of credibility, I think it is ESSENTIAL to:
📌Cite your work aggressively
I am not an expert on most of the topics I tweet about. I must show my work.
Citing aggressively also allows others to read the primary literature for themselves (if they want to).
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Tony Breu
@tony_breu
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2. velj |
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15/
If you’re like me, figures/tables from the cited research help make your point and also lend credibility. So:
📌Make use of available multimedia
I make an attempt to annotate the figures/table I include, those this may not always be necessary. pic.twitter.com/5sKNrGbEIn
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Tony Breu
@tony_breu
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2. velj |
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14/
I have typically included a closing question, often a repeat of the first.
I remain uncertain of the utility of this (i.e., does it "prove" learning has occurred?).
Applying the knowledge to new situations/questions (i.e., elaboration) may be better. This is harder to do.
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Tony Breu
@tony_breu
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2. velj |
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13/
On this topic:
📌Make use of polls/surveys
Surveys/polls allow you to take advantage of the testing effect.
They also provide one of the better indicators of engagement. Do the answers drop dramatically from the first to the last poll? That may indicate waning interest.
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Tony Breu
@tony_breu
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2. velj |
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12/
Another option is to include a poll/survey in the first tweet.
I have found that if a poll/survey is included in the FIRST tweet, it gets many more responses.
This should come as no surprise given that the first tweet is the tweet with the most Impressions. pic.twitter.com/tNrd8CVDTT
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Tony Breu
@tony_breu
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2. velj |
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11/
If you want your Tweetorial to teach others, they must read the WHOLE thing (not just see tweet 1). Given this:
📌Open with a hook & clearly state the issue you’ll be covering
I focus on the question posed. I try to engage peoples' curiosity so they want to read more.
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Tony Breu
@tony_breu
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2. velj |
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10/
If you agree with the premise of tweet 9, is it worth thinking about how to get people to see your Tweetorial.
If you don’t have a lot of followers, you might:
📌Consider tagging people in the first/last tweet
But, do this judiciously as those tagged get notifications.
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