Social Media as a Strategic Tool in School Management: Experience of
Ukraine and USA
Liubov A. Kartashova
1 a
, Nataliia O. Prykhodkina
1 b
, Tetiana A. Makhynia
1 c
,
Hanna M. Tymoshko
1,2 d
, Olena A. Sholokh
2 e
and Feliks M. Zhuravlev
3
1
University of Educational Management, 52A Sichovykh Striltsiv Str., Kyiv, 04053, Ukraine
2
T. H. Shevchenko National University “Chernihiv Collegium”, 53 Hetman Polubotka Str., Chernihiv, 14000, Ukraine
3
State University of Economics and Technology, 5 Stepana Tilhy Str., Kryvyi Rih, 50006, Ukraine
Keywords:
Social Media, School Management, Massive Open Online Courses (MOOC), School Leaders, Management
of the Educational Institution, Certification Training.
Abstract:
The article presents the results of the analysis of using of social media in school management in Ukraine and
United States of America. Social media is broadly defined as a lot of relatively inexpensive and widely avail-
able electronic instruments that allow any person to publish and receive information, collaborate and build
relationships with other people. The authors of the article break up social media into social networks, blogs,
content hosting. There are some constructive conclusions made in the article. The educational opportunities of
social media among Ukrainian specialists are very underestimated. The value of social media as an instrument
of the educational process is undeservedly belittled. Many educators treat them with neglect and skepticism,
considering social media exclusively as an entertaining resource. Using of social media for educational pur-
poses is perceived by American students, teachers, researchers as self-evident and inalienable function. The
American didactic experience reveals that social media can be successfully used to arrange the work of the
teaching staff and students, hold individual and collective consultations enhancing intellectual and creative
potential of students. The data reports “Global Guide 2020”, “90 days that changed K-12 teaching & learn-
ing: strengthening the bonds of communications”, “2019 Social Media Trends in Education Report”, “Digital
learning during the pandemic: Emerging Evidence of an Education Transformation” and the Ukrainian State
Education Quality Service for 2020 are analyzed in the article. The authors had a content analysis on the
massive open online courses (MOOC) by the Ukrainian platforms EdEra, Prometheus and VUM online and
the English ones such as edX, Udemy, FutureLearn, XuetangX and Coursera, whose self-study contributes to
the readiness for the effective using of social media in school management.
1 INTRODUCTION
The modern period of development of school man-
agement is characterized by the active and compre-
hensive implementation of information and commu-
nication technologies. The main goal of their imple-
mentation is the improving the quality of training and
the interaction of all participants in the educational
process.
The social media grows in popularity all over the
a
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1270-4158
b
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6211-5546
c
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4065-0465
d
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0996-6138
e
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5258-8086
world. According to a new research by GlobalWe-
bIndex (www.gwi.com, 2021), people expend a third
of their network time in social media. Comscore data
also shows that percentage of time spent on social me-
dia and messengers accounts for more than a quarter
of time spent on their mobile devices.
Social media is growing rapidly and becoming a
social force with a life of its own, offering us the im-
mediacy and availability of information and data and
the immediacy of people, conversing and working to-
gether in areas of common interest.
1.1 Related Works
Kaplan and Haenlein (Kaplan and Haenlein, 2010)
gave a definition to social media as “a group of In-
196
Kartashova, L., Prykhodkina, N., Makhynia, T., Tymoshko, H., Sholokh, O. and Zhuravlev, F.
Social Media as a Strategic Tool in School Management: Experience of Ukraine and USA.
DOI: 10.5220/0010922400003364
In Proceedings of the 1st Symposium on Advances in Educational Technology (AET 2020) - Volume 1, pages 196-210
ISBN: 978-989-758-558-6
Copyright
c
2022 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
ternet applications basing on the ideological and tech-
nological foundations of Web 2.0 that allow to create
and share user content”. Web 2.0 is a tendency to
develop websites on the similar principles stemming
from the focus on the project and service socializa-
tion, its improvement by users (O’Reilly, 2005). So-
cial media is fundamentally different from traditional
types of media by implementing a bidirectional infor-
mation transfer strategy meaning “many sources and
many recipients” (Scott, 2017). Traditional media, in
its turn, uses a unidirectional strategy meaning one
source and many recipients.
There is no generally accepted definition of the
term “social media”. In our opinion, the most concise,
simple and relevant definition of this phenomenon is:
“Social media is broadly defined as a lot of relatively
inexpensive and widely available electronic instru-
ments that allow any person to publish and receive
information, collaborate and build relationships with
other people” (Education World, 2012).
Social media is an online communication in
Thornley (Thornley, 2008) terms with express un-
derstanding that a person can smoothly and flexibly
change their role, to appear either as an audience or
participant. Social software is used for this purpose
which makes it possible anyone (without specific cod-
ing expertise) to post, comment, move, edit informa-
tion, create communities on their interests.
Stephens (Stephens, 2011) defines social media as
“forms of communication either Internet or text-based
that support social interactions of individuals”.
Azhnyuk (Azhnyuk, 2012) defines social media as
an online service intended for the mass distribution of
user-generated content, wherein anyone could be an
author as opposed to traditional media wherein au-
thors are pre-selected and limited audience.
Some researchers consider the concepts of “social
media” and “social network” as synonymous. How-
ever, we feel that this is incorrect. We are on board
with the statement of Scott (Scott, 2017) that “social
media is a superset and social network is a subset”.
Thus, social networks are just a specific instance of
social media albeit the most popular one.
Azhnyuk (Azhnyuk, 2012) breaks up social media
into 3 categories: 1) social networks; 2) blogs (includ-
ing standalone, blog hosting, microblogging, etc.);
3) content hosting (photo services like Instagram and
Flickr, video hosting services like YouTube, hosting
for slides, documents, music like Slideshare, Scribd,
Soundloud, etc.). However, he notes that online me-
dia intended for personal contact or group communi-
cation, rather than for mass publication should not be
relegated to social media, in particular, e-mail, mes-
sengers, online games.
Zhdanova (Zhdanova, 2019) identifies 7 types of
social media:
1. Social networks are online services that prompt
you to make new acquaintances and form inter-
est communities. A user has an online profile
and several ways to interact with others (through
groups, events, polls, games, etc.) on such sites.
Facebook and LinkedIn are the most famous ex-
amples of social networks.
2. Messengers are online messaging services where
users interact through personal correspondence.
Messenger applications are available on mobile
devices such as Telegram, Viber, WhatsApp.
3. Social bookmarking sites help users save and
share interesting information as a link to other re-
sources. For example, the Pinterest network al-
lows you to store a large number of images in dif-
ferent categories in order to facilitate the search
later.
4. Blogsand forums offer comments to many users at
the same time. Medium, Blogger and WordPress
are well-known blogging platforms.
5. Microblogging lets you send short updates (140
characters) to everybody subscribed to such up-
dates. The most outstanding microblogging, Twit-
ter, has gained a lot of attention among journalists,
as it allows you to quickly track developments and
get information on what’s happening on the spot.
6. Social news services allow users to create or pub-
lish links to news from other sources. The main
element is voting, the community chooses this
way which news will become the most important
and visible to the rest of the users. The most fa-
mous example is Reddit.
7. Multimedia hosting is services possessing most of
the social network peculiarities (user profile, cir-
cle of friends, opportunities to ditribute and com-
ment on information), but it is primarily focused
on the ability to download video, photo and audio
files. Examples include YouTube, Vimeo, Flikr.
1.2 Social Media in Educational
Management
One key task of the educational management is to en-
sure the development of the educational institution as
an independent organization through establishing in-
teraction with all participants of the educational pro-
cess, partnership with public organizations and sup-
port of local business. Relationship networks take a
position of one effective interaction model for all par-
ticipants of the educational process. Skills of active
Social Media as a Strategic Tool in School Management: Experience of Ukraine and USA
197
communication through social networks are currently
necessary for everyone. Facebook, Twitter, YouTube
and other networks have moved beyond a framework
of face-to-face interaction and it is powerful com-
munication platforms facilitating both to build your
brand and be a virtual representation for government,
business, and public organizations.
Unlike the official websites of general secondary
educational institutions requiring training in a more
professional way for updating information and estab-
lishing feedback, the pages of institutions in social
media have their own characteristics determined by
the properties of electronic communication as prompt
dissemination of information, accessibility, simplified
search the target audience, ease of the feedback set up
and so forth. It has own structure, organizational and
technological parameters affecting the nature of social
connections and being an element of the constructing
mechanism for the communicative space within mod-
ern society, performing several functions while creat-
ing a value basis of its existence.
Primbs (Primbs, 2016) identifies key needs for
users in social media:
managing relationships from Facebook dating as a
replacement for exchanging visiting cards to close
contacts in the family or community of friends;
managing information by filtering news and rel-
evant information based on user preferences
through friends and subscriptions;
managing one’s identity by forming a personal
brand.
For the foregoing reasons a follower of the web-
site of the educational institution or school principal
having independently joined a school community on
social media is in position to:
establish contacts between the participants of the
educational process and to terminate communica-
tion without explanations at any moment;
set up constant access to information on news of
the educational institution activity due to the oper-
ational aspects of search algorithms of social me-
dia;
develop own attitude to certain events in the ed-
ucational field relying upon an opinion of the ex-
perts of the ultimate educational brands. It means
that actual attitude of the experts to a particular
educational institution and a vision for the further
developments is relevant for the followers rather
than the information in itself under the context of
big data on educational reforms reported by thou-
sands of sources.
Thus, for the head of an educational institution,
the presence on the social network personally or
through the institution’s page allows to promptly in-
form the participants of the educational process with
the life of the organization, purposefully manage the
flows of various information, influence their con-
sciousness and worldview transforming parents from
“readers/observers” to active coexperiencers/fans or
vice versa, however, awareness ensures that the neg-
ative developments of individual autonomy are re-
duced.
Returning to the (Primbs, 2016), the role of fans
should be emphasized: “Real fans are much more
than mere readers/listeners/viewers/target group, fans
interact. Fans are ready to do something for the ob-
ject of their worship. Fans are the first to submit pho-
tos when you are announcing a photo contest. Fans
write the first comments under your posts breaking
the ice. Fans cut trolls down to size excusing from a
nasty work. Fans will also stand with you when you
get a shitstorm. They provide entertainment for reg-
ular visitors of your community. And they give you
stuff you can work with again”.
The communication efficiency on the network is
manifested by a high level of trust within the network,
as opposed to distrust of external persons; existence
of a unifying ideology/religion/lifestyle that allows to
act together; targeted message delivery, which make
possible it to be received precisely by the person who
really needs it, as opposed to communication with a
mass but passive audience in the case of traditional
media (Pocheptsov, 2012). These are mechanisms for
the group functioning that ensure the integration of
individual actions in joint group activity and commu-
nication.
One of the crucial components of the management
process in an educational institution is to inform par-
ticipants of the educational process and communities
on its activity in open public resources (Bobrovskyy
et al., 2019).
2 RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
The pedagogical research under consideration has
been carried out as part of the research work “Train-
ing of competitive specialists in the context of educa-
tional changes” (RK 0117U002378) to be conducted
in 2017-2021 by the Department of Pedagogy, Ad-
ministration and Social Work of the Educational and
Scientific Institute of Management and Psychology of
the University of Educational Management of the Na-
tional Academy of Educational Sciences of Ukraine.
The aim of the article is the comparative analysis
AET 2020 - Symposium on Advances in Educational Technology
198
of features of using of social media in school man-
agement: experience of Ukraine and United States of
America.
We monitored 120 sites of Ukrainian middle
schools and 123 sites of American schools (several
sites from each state).
The monitoring parameters are:
which social media do principals use in managing
of the schools, teams of teachers and students?
what are the purposes of using social media?
Also we monitored the pages of Ukrainian and
U.S. principals in social networks.
We conducted a survey of 138 school principals of
Ukraine. The key survey questions were:
do you have a personal page in social networks?
does your school have its own page in social net-
works?
what social networks do you use in your manage-
rial activities?
are there any barriers to school communication in
social networks?
which information in social networks is the most
interesting for participants of the educational pro-
cess?
We had a content analysis on the massive open
online courses (MOOC) by the Ukrainian platforms
EdEra, Prometheus and VUM online and the En-
glish ones such as edX, Udemy, FutureLearn, Xue-
tangX and Coursera, whose self-study contributes to
the readiness for the effective using of social media in
school management.
We have also used the online survey results of 3,9
thousand principals of general secondary educational
institutions, educators, parents and the students from
9–11 grades on the distance learning in schools of
Ukraine that was conducted by the State Education
Inspectorate of Ukraine in the period from April 8 to
15, 2020.
For comparison we took the results of a survey of
American school principals from the report at the of-
ficial website of U.S. Department of Education “So-
cial media in school emergency management: Using
new media technology to improve emergency man-
agement communications” (Stephens, 2011), the re-
port of Pew Research Center “Social networking fact
sheet” (Pew Research Center, 2018), reports “Global
Guide 2020” (EducationUSA, 2020), “90 days that
changed K-12 teaching & learning: strengthening
the bonds of communications” (tomorrow.org, 2020),
“2019 Social Media Trends in Education Report”
(classintercom.com, 2019).
3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Using social media, the schools can:
quickly respond to the needs of the audience:
hear the parent, student and the public commu-
nity (highlight the main topics for discussion, get
feedback);
prevent conflicts due to operational coverage of
problems in the activities of the school;
through social networks learn more about the ac-
tivities of other schools and build own strategy for
activities in social networks;
fill vacancies and provide the school with highly
qualified personnel by searching for personnel in
social networks. For example, the group “Jobs for
educators” on Facebook. The goal is to post mes-
sages about available vacancies in schools and for
teachers which find work.
In the school social media are primarily an ex-
ternal communication tool. For large schools with a
large number of participants in the educational pro-
cess, social media can be a tool for interaction be-
tween participants in the educational process among
themselves (for example, quickly obtain the necessary
information and provide mutual assistance). The so-
cial media allow to the teaching staff, and especially
to the director, to quickly resolve issues related to the
adaptation and rotation of personnel.
We obtained the following experimental results
(table 1).
Most principals avoid committing to the pro-
fessional use of social media because it’s com-
pletely overwhelming. Between Instagram, Twitter,
YouTube, and Facebook etc., it is hard to know what
will yield the best results. It’s important to consider
the best social media for purposes.
Every principal tries to choose the best way to
promote wonderful school community. For learning
and interacting, the American principals of middle
schools use Twitter. It is the gold standard for them.
For documenting and sharing the cool work happen-
ing in school, Instagram and YouTube are the best
and most popular tools. Flickr is useful for sharing
pictures. American principals of middle schools use
Facebook for calendar reminders and getting the word
out quickly about calendar changes and events plan-
ning.
For example, the school principal Eric Sheninger,
2013 American “Best Director Award” winner, best-
selling author of “Digital Leadership: Changing
Paradigms for Changing Times” (Sheninger, 2014),
allowed his teachers to submit their daily reports us-
ing blog. Sheninger’s blog was viewed by 6,500 peo-
Social Media as a Strategic Tool in School Management: Experience of Ukraine and USA
199
Table 1: The results of monitoring of the use by school principals of social media in school management (2019 year).
Social media The results of monitoring of Ukraine The results of monitoring of the USA
Facebook 96 % 98 %
Instagram 33 % 87 %
Twitter 1 % 99 %
Telegram 10 % -
WhatsApp 4 % 76 %
Viber 36 % 11 %
Youtube 25 % 84 %
Linkedln - 28 %
Google Blogger 5 % 87 %
Google+ 5 % 89 %
Pinterest 7 % 56 %
Skype 12 % 42 %
Flickr - 63 %
ple worldwide and over 600 are constantly following
the life of the principal and his school in September
2019. It is interesting that it was an incentive not
only to report to the administration on their work for
teachers, but also to share with others the experience
they have gained by introducing gadgets into teach-
ing, as well as the success stories achieved by the stu-
dents in these lessons. The topics of blog posts be-
gan gradually to expand, teachers shared the system
of grades in school, their rubrics, how they interact
with children outside of school, how the use of gad-
gets improves academic performance, and so on. A
new perspective on education and blog creation has
transformed the lives of teachers and students. Firstly,
the US government purchased the latest equipment at
the school Eric Sheninger writes proudly about on his
blog (Sheninger, 2014). Secondly, teachers from all
over the world came to the school in New Jersey to
learn about the experience. In addition, the virtual re-
ality company provided a program that allowed New
Milford school students and their teachers to attend
virtual space meetings where children could ask ques-
tions, and virtual training courses were provided.
The principal of Renner Elementary School
Teresa Tulipana embraces the social media as a com-
munication tool. Facebook and Twitter accounts keep
families abreast of school events and happenings. She
envisioned them as systems to provide calendar re-
minders. She thinks the Facebook is also a great
tool for sharing our school’s academic and behav-
ioral focus areas in an efficient, fun and engaging
manner. Recently a kindergarten teacher posted an
Animoto highlighting pictures from Writer’s Work-
shop, which communicated the importance of writing
at our school. When the fourth grade completed Fa-
mous Missourian research projects, these were posted
so parents were able to understand the value and im-
Table 2: Comparative analysis of the goals of using social
media in school management in the USA and Ukraine (2019
year).
The goals of using social
media in school manage-
ment
The
purpose
rating of
Ukraine
The
purpose
rating of
the USA
Simplified search for the tar-
get audience allowing to ex-
pand personal and profes-
sional contacts between par-
ticipants of the educational
process
1 (90 %) 3 (87 %)
Demonstration of educa-
tional measures
2 (70 %) 4 (85 %)
Public disclosure of suc-
cesses of students, teachers
and school classes
3 (62 %) 1 (99 %)
Public disclosure of urgent
announcement
4 (57 %) 2 (98 %)
Demonstration of various
forms of training
5 (49 %) 6 (76 %)
Project and competition re-
porting where both students
and teachers can participate
6 (43 %) 7 (62 %)
Clarification on the issues
of the educational process
(school enrollment, standard-
ized external testing, state fi-
nal examination, etc.)
7 (41 %) 8 (39 %)
Explanation of educational
reforms and innovations
8 (33 %) 9 (11 %)
Challenges of participants of
educational process consol-
idation concerning engage-
ment in socially important
projects
9 (17 %) 5 (81 %)
AET 2020 - Symposium on Advances in Educational Technology
200
portance of their research. Social media has also al-
lowed to deploy important professional development
content in Renner Elementary School. Recently they
used Blackboard, an educational social media tool, to
host a virtual faculty meeting. Through Blackboard,
staff watched a short Rick Wormeli video on defining
mastery, and then responded to reflection questions
on a discussion board. This flexible format allowed
staff members to learn at a time that was convenient
to their own personal calendars and increased engage-
ment by assuring that every voice was heard (Educa-
tion World, 2012).
The principal of Tomahawk Creek Middle School
says that the teachers of her school utilize social me-
dia whenever they can. They currently have a Face-
book page for school and PTA. She have found that
this was a great way to get messages out to parents
and students. There are several teachers who use Ed-
modo to post discussions and assignments for their
students, and they have reported remarkable success
using this tool. For example, one teacher had 25 kids
on Edmodo the day he started using it. They are look-
ing at implementing a Twitter account next year to
help get information out to the community. Although
this is not a replacement for standard means of com-
munication (Web sites, letters home, etc.), it is a great
additional way to share information with community.
As far as discipline issues go, they attempt to address
those who cause the issues. The technology is here to
stay, so they try to implement it where they can and
deal with the trouble issues when they arise. Thus
far, they have had no problems using these means of
communication (Education World, 2012).
Principal of South Side Elementary School in
Bristol, Connecticut, David Huber thinks that Twitter
is more than just a social media platform. It’s also a
professional learning resource, a tool to communicate
with students’ families, and a way showcase student
achievements (Friedman, 2019).
One area of the social network usage being actu-
ally the origin for its popularity in Ukraine was the
involvement to solve socially important issues of par-
ticipants of the educational process. In particular,
Facebook has been used to inform, mobilize and raise
funds for volunteers during the Revolution of Dignity
since November 2013. Therefore, the school admin-
istration resorts to this tool in order to continue this
work to assist and support the ATO warriors and re-
port on the done work. In addition, content analy-
sis of the pages of the administration and teachers of
educational institutions of Ukraine shows the effec-
tiveness of similar charitable work in collecting assis-
tance among participants in the educational process
supporting socially disadvantaged sections of the pop-
ulation or volunteers as orphanages, elderly people,
rural libraries, hospitals, etc.
In addition to it, not only prompt information but
also targeted support directly to the participants of the
educational process are provided through the Face-
book network and messengers, among which Viber
is the most popular for the management of the educa-
tional institution. It is about involving a large num-
ber of indifferent people to help the participants of
the educational process who were in an emergency
like fire, accident, surgical treatment, etc. Such as-
sistance massively reduces fraud and disillusionment
with charities through direct personal contacts.
Another example of the social networks usage
in the school management is the establishment of
successful cooperation and communication between
educational institutions of municipal ownership and
its public within the framework of project activi-
ties aimed at repairing or arranging the territory and
premises of educational institutions, as well as build-
out of a creative, development or inclusive environ-
ment. The key to the success of such projects is the
proper organization of its advertising on social net-
works by the author of the project, in particular, the
administration of the educational institution, as well
as high activity of participants in the educational pro-
cess to support projects in social networks. 663 ed-
ucational projects have particularly won according to
the results of the “Public Budget 2020” project out of
1564 projects in 13 categories having passed the stage
of planning and implementation in Kyiv that, which is
42 % of all projects (gb.kyivcity.gov.ua, 2019).
Nevertheless, social networks are equally threat-
ening. The freedom of the information distribution
through social networks and communities regardless
of its content and quality particularly transforms the
virtual Internet space into a risk zone for the spiritual
and moral sphere of the individual shifting classical
values and developing a new virtual culture.
An interesting transformation was occurred to
Facebook community “Parents SOS” founded in June
2014 due to the initiative “talk on the social network”
in order to discuss problems related to education, as-
sistance to parents in the case of mistreatment of their
children in school or kindergarten and initiate sys-
temic changes in education.
The community works according to a simple plan:
1) the situation is announced (at school or in educa-
tion in general);
2) it is discovered how this situation complies with
the law;
3) the conclusion what should be changed whether
the situation or the legislation, and they change it
together.
Social Media as a Strategic Tool in School Management: Experience of Ukraine and USA
201
Despite the fact that the public organization initi-
ated many changes in the education system through
civic initiatives during the its existence, its members
often resorted to systematic violation of netiquette, re-
sorting to rude, obscene, evaluative expressions and
personal affront in the beginning. Instead of solving
a problem, sometimes it was possible to be sunk in
the information rain of value judgments supporting a
particular message have not received a solution to the
problem in the real world.
It should be noted that the group’s administrators
are currently working hard to address these shortcom-
ings, as evidenced by the article’s content analysis of
the group’s 2019 publications. In particular, publica-
tions are increasingly focusing on situations of suc-
cess as systemic changes, concrete victories over bu-
reaucracy in education and extortion; legal clarifica-
tion of the rights and freedoms of participants in the
educational process; clear algorithms for solving the
most common educational problems for all partici-
pants.
So we have determined grounding on our analysis
that the following types of social media are the most
popular for USA and Ukrainian school:
1. Blogs.
A blog is a 21st century newsletter. Blogs pro-
vide a two-way interaction and allow the school
administration to integrate multimedia content in
order to make the school popular. There is no bet-
ter way to share strategies, ideas and success sto-
ries. Teaching blogs are no less popular, with the
help of which teachers can effectively manage the
independent extracurricular work of students, as
well as create tasks aimed at improving the skills
of speech activity. Learning different types of let-
ters (search, viewing, familiarization and study-
ing) is facilitated by the unlimited ability to post
links in any quantity to materials different from
each other. Also, blogs are in no way inferior in
the possibility of acquiring speaking and listening
skills. This happens through the use of podcasts,
through educational texts of radio programs, and
videos that are freely available on the Internet. In-
tegration of all the listed training methods into a
blog allows you to listen to files repeatedly, and if
necessary, stop and revise files. American Schools
use Google Blogger, Wordpress, Edutopia (San
Rafael, California), FreeTech4Teachers (Maine),
Rubicon (Portland, Oregon), Hands On As We
Grow (Iowa), Class Tech Tips Blog (New Jer-
sey), The Applicious Teacher (Orlando, Florida),
Teaching Heart Blog (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
and other platforms. For example, Eric Sheninger
in addition to his official blog as Principal of New
Milford (Sheninger, 2021), has created a profes-
sional blog to tell the story of the digital transfor-
mation of the school and learn from others inter-
ested in digital leadership.
There are a number of impressive blogs by heads
of schools in Ukraine on the Internet, the number
of which is impressive. In particular, the Google
request “blog of a school principal” represents 19
million search results. However, it should be un-
derstood that the use of blogs in the management
of general secondary education is often due to ex-
ternal circumstances as a requirement for certifi-
cation. For this reason, the Internet is full of blogs
formally created with the glut of popular articles,
elements of plagiarism or unstructured content.
Quality content could only be seen by those exec-
utives who are passionate about this type of work
and update the materials systematically. However,
interviews with more than 400 education execu-
tives show that blogs in Ukraine are currently an
outdated tool and can be completely replaced by
social networks. Therefore, a mere 5 % of heads
of our online respondents use blogs in their man-
agement activities.
2. Digital photo sharing.
Photos can quickly depict and share student work,
improvements and achievements. American and
Ukrainian school principals and teachers take pic-
tures of student projects and then post it on Insta-
gram. American teachers also use Pics4Learning
during classroom observations. They share pho-
tos with other accounts such as Twitter from their
Instagram account.
3. Video platform.
Creating a YouTube, TeacherTube, SchoolTube
channels or Vine account for school allows you to
record and share educational and social processes.
Teachers and administration of American schools
share live events such as school concerts in real
time using such tools like Ustream, ClassVR etc.
In Ukraine the principals use YouTube.
4. Twitter.
Twitter, the best-known free microblogging appli-
cation, is particularly useful for fast exchanges of
thoughts, ideas, and information. American sci-
entists were among the first users of the social
network Twitter. During the first years of exis-
tence, it was dominated by reports of scientific
conferences, symposiums, research citations, etc.
140-character tweets are a dynamic combination
of text, images, videos, and website links. Hav-
ing created a hashtag for the school you could
share a conversation with related parties with the
AET 2020 - Symposium on Advances in Educational Technology
202
ability to search for any problematic topic iden-
tified through Twitter. At the beginning of each
school year American school leaders send par-
ents a letter describing, how to create a Twitter
account and to set up options for receiving text
messages. Ability to receive Twitter updates on
its own terms makes it unlike any traditional com-
munication tool (Scott, 2017).
5. Facebook.
World famous resource Facebook has emerged as
an academic social network. Initially the website
was available only for students at Harvard Univer-
sity. Then registration was opened to other uni-
versities in Boston, and later for students of all
educational institutions in the USA. All the above
tools could be integrated or published on the Face-
book page (Thornley, 2008). It is the favorite so-
cial media among Ukrainian and American school
principals and teachers.
It is impossible to create and maintain confidence
in the operation of the institution being a mandatory.
It is impossible to create requirement for effective ed-
ucational activities without prompt and complete in-
formation. That is why the administration should or-
ganize the activity of the educational institution under
the conditions of information openness and communi-
cation with the participants of the educational process
and the community.
Information transparency is ensured by the avail-
ability of educational facilities including social net-
works Information transparency in the educational in-
stitution to inform the participants of the educational
process. The educational institution decides itself
what to inform of and how to do it additionally. The
primary principle of information distribution is to re-
port important data for parents who are the most con-
cerned and critical audience.
It is for the purpose of enabling local educa-
tional managers to communicate quickly, correctly
and clearly, not to be afraid of criticism and be able
to turn to crisis situations, an online course “Effective
Communications for Educational Managers” has been
developed by the public organization “Smart Educa-
tion” powered by the EdEra online platform (EdEra,
2019) and viewed by 4,400 people during 10 months
of 2019.
In order to be successful communicators in the
modern information space, its developers offer:
be persistent and consistent in sending a message,
ideas and facts, the audience will be grateful for
accurate navigation in the chaos of educational in-
formation;
repeat the message many times in different for-
mats through interviews, events, photos, info-
graphic, etc aiming to be heard;
know what bothers and what interests your audi-
ences, and build your business and communica-
tion against this background;
always keep efforts and resources on the mission
of the institution;
focus on the simplicity and clearness of messages;
have unique inspirational stories;
get your audiences as close as possible.
Much attention is paid to anti-crisis communica-
tions, which goal is to immediately and firmly aban-
don attempts concealing any unpredictable or even
unpleasant event in the educational institution. The
overall penetration of modern communications into
the public life makes it absolutely impossible to con-
ceal any information. One of the primary principles
of public communication should be remembered: a
person first reported the event largely determines the
further development of its media coverage.
The unpredictable event message should consist
of three required components answering the following
questions:
“what happened?” provide full information on
the event, immediately blocking or at least sub-
stantially reducing the possibility of misinforma-
tion on it;
“what are we doing?” the school demonstrates
its proactive stance in addressing the problem,
what has been taken to remedy the problem, who
have been further involved and informed;
“what to expect?” – an uncomfortable state of un-
certainty is removed or at least significantly re-
duced for the person, the most probable develop-
ments are shown.
Lastly you should always report how the problem
is resolved. Given that, you also should be frank, and
if the problem cannot be finally resolved for some
reason at the school level, then it should be obliga-
tory revealed and reported on further steps to resolve
it (Kobernik and Krasnova, 2019).
Since information distribution and communica-
tion are grounded on the processes of dissemination
and exchange of information, it is important to know
how these processes are implemented and how they
can be effectively organized. Building quality infor-
mation distribution by the head to the participants of
the educational process and the community can con-
tribute in many ways to improving the level of media
literacy of the administration and teaching staff of the
institution.
Social Media as a Strategic Tool in School Management: Experience of Ukraine and USA
203
The characteristic of social networks particularly
has the underside in the rapid and prompt dissemina-
tion of information. A prime example is sharing of
“innocent” fakes at the request of the school admin-
istration with good intention of preventing the con-
sequences of participation in the games “Blue Cat”,
“Run or Die”, “Momo”, “Candy” and a new game
“Bounce!” through social networks by parents. Low
media literacy of participants of the educational pro-
cess, lack of ability to recognize the signs of fake
news, poor orientation of critical perception of infor-
mation contributes to the testing parents of various
technologies of measuring the status of the audience
and channels of information dissemination on social
networks.
Information security should start with every par-
ticipant in the educational process, especially with the
school administration, and it should become a daily
habit for us not to become the object of fake dis-
semination, a tool for the introduction of dirty tech-
nologies, a convenient toy in the game of manipu-
lators. Such results are summed up in their posts
by Ukrainian media educators Inna Ivanova (review
of the “Candy” fakes, September 2018) and Svitlana
Izbash (review of the “Bounce!” fakes, February
2020) hereby preventing parents from “advertising”
such games.
The school principal should also consider other
types of danger that students may encounter using any
network and that should be taken into account in the
institution policy:
content (access to information not intended for
children of appropriate age);
behavior (offering actions that could endanger
child safety, fraud);
dangerous contacts (chatting, file sharing, mes-
sengers).
In order to avoid such risks, a school principal
should develop his own policy on the safe use of the
Internet, which provides:
content filters;
availability of antivirus programs and its timely
updating;
use of Internet resources during training sessions
under the teacher control;
monitoring the page on social networks with re-
spect to placing unauthorized information on it;
providing educators and students with training on
safe use of the Internet and development of end-
to-end information and digital competence;
online culture enhancement of the communication
participants of the educational process;
preservation of personal data of participants of the
educational process (Bobrovskyy et al., 2019).
4 CHALLENGES THAT SCHOOL
LEADERS FACED DURING THE
PANDEMIC
School leaders’ roles have been unexpectedly and dra-
matically changed by the COVID-19 crisis. The un-
precedented nature of this situation means there is no
set direction for them to follow. School leaders are
like actors in a play where the story, the script and cos-
tumes have all changed mid-performance, and they
are on stage improvising to adjust to their new role
(Sampat and Oommen, 2020).
The forced mass introduction of distance learn-
ing technologies during the pandemic (Polhun et al.,
2021) has exacerbated the issue of using of social me-
dia in school management.
In the period from April 8 to 15, 2020, the State
Education Quality Service of Ukraine conducted an
anonymous online survey of 3.9 thousand school prin-
cipals, 43.4 thousand teachers, 120.5 thousand par-
ents and 44.1 thousand students of 9-11th grades
(sqe.gov.ua, 2020).
From the point of view of our research, we were
interested in the results of a survey of principals,
who make up more than 25% of school principals
in Ukraine. 49.95% of them work in rural areas,
41.98% – in cities and 8.07% – in urban settlements.
Most parents and students in grades 9–11 who par-
ticipated in the survey confirmed that for the period of
quarantine there is distance learning in all subjects of
the invariant component:
102,380 parents (85%);
36,425 students (83%).
The directors of general secondary educational in-
stitutions also assured that 97% of educational insti-
tutions for the period of quarantine teach students us-
ing distance learning technologies. The preference for
distance learning is divided in half:
55% of surveyed students (24,087 people) and
50% of parents (60,569 people) were positive;
45% of students (20,001 people) and 48% of par-
ents (57,858 people) gave a negative response.
After completing the quarantine, 41% of the sur-
veyed teachers (17,872 people) indicated their desire
to use distance learning technologies, including social
media, and 54% (23,397 people) would use them par-
tially. Only 5% of teachers (2,096 people) stated that
AET 2020 - Symposium on Advances in Educational Technology
204
they would not turn to distance learning technologies
in the future.
The results of the survey of principals also con-
firmed that almost 96.9% of general secondary edu-
cational institutions (GSEI) during the quarantine pe-
riod students are taught using distance learning tech-
nologies. The majority of leaders (75.9%) noted that
the entire teaching staff was involved. However, in
almost 20.1% of schools, distance learning is pro-
vided only by teachers who are provided with com-
puter equipment and Internet access. At the same
time, 3.12% of the surveyed (GSEI) leaders stated that
their school did not switch to remote work mode.
Under quarantine, educational institutions use dif-
ferent modes of distance learning, programs and dig-
ital services. GSEI leaders noted that online learn-
ing is mainly used for distance work. The most
effective are services with the ability to assess the
level of assimilation of the material they are used
by 44.88%, without the possibility of evaluation
20.27%. Asynchronous learning with the ability to
assess the level of assimilation of the material is car-
ried out by 20.55% of GSEI.
According to the report, the issue of establishing
effective interaction with participants in the educa-
tional process is identified as one of the most difficult
in the implementation of distance learning along with
technical support, methodological training and orga-
nizational issues (Pavlik and McIntosh, 2016).
As noted in the “Global Guide 2020”, in the USA
Facebook, Instagram, and Linkedln are the dominant
social media platforms for education, where available.
Twitter and YouTube are also popular social platforms
for education. There were used virtual meeting plat-
forms such as Zoom and Google Meet to expand and
enhance outreach (EducationUSA, 2020).
We analysed the results of Project Tomorrow, an
education nonprofit that runs the on-going Speak Up
Research Project (Evans, 2020). The latest data gives
responses from 110,467 K-12 students, 11,731 teach-
ers and librarians, 1,128 school and district level ad-
ministrators, 11,749 parents and 1,532 community
members collected between March 16 2020 and June
30, 2020 (tomorrow.org, 2020).
The situation in which schools found themselves
in connection with the pandemic, opened new oppor-
tunities for more students to regularly communicate
with their teachers using email. Email communica-
tions with teachers and students in middle school, for
example, increased 33% during school closures: The
percentage of students in grades 3–5 who regularly
email their teachers also increased from 8% to 16%.
Over three-quarters of students in grades 6–12 (77%)
report that personal emails are now a standard mode
of communications with their teachers. Students are
reporting that this new communications avenue pro-
vided more efficient and effective ways for them to get
feedback from their teachers and to help them solve
learning challenges with just-in-time support.
The new environment has also accelerated the
adoption of text messaging between students and
teachers as a communications modality. In 2015, only
14% of teachers said that they were using texting to
communicate with students. Though teachers regu-
larly report using text messages and other forms of
social media to communicate with colleagues (57%)
and even parents (28%), their adoption of this tool to
communicate directly with students, either individu-
ally or as a class, has not increased in the past five
years.
Relative to teacher communications, middle
school students are united in their preference for three
types of digital tools, personal emails (56%), text
messages (55%) and auto phone messages (49%).
The sudden shift to digital learning as a result of
the pandemic-induced school closures required many
school and district leaders to think differently about
the purpose of school, new modalities for instruction,
and how to effectively harness a wide range of digital
tools to support learning continuity. In some cases,
administrators relaxed district rules about the use of
personal devices, mobile apps and social media ac-
counts to help facilitate efficiency and effectiveness
in this unprecedented time. For example, while most
districts did not encourage teachers to text message
with students prior to the school closures, the use of
texting increased significantly during the school clo-
sure period as both students and teachers (as well as
parents) found the usage to be highly effective. Given
both the value of those enhanced communications
channels, and the continued uncertainty in school for-
mats during pandemic, it is most likely that more dig-
ital tools, even including new social media platforms,
will emerge to support student-teacher communica-
tions.
District technology leaders (54%) say they under-
stand the importance of putting in place safeguards
to protect student data when instituting a new digital
initiative or adopting new technologies to support in-
struction. However, only 17% of school districts are
currently using a risk dashboard to identify students
in trouble or in need of adult intervention based upon
their communications messages over the school net-
work.
This issue of communications over the school or
district network versus a student or teacher using a
personal smartphone and their own data plan to trans-
mit messages is also an important consideration. Ef-
Social Media as a Strategic Tool in School Management: Experience of Ukraine and USA
205
ficiency of communications was a chief concern dur-
ing the school closures, and thus as documented many
students and teachers gravitated easily to their own
personal accounts to help facilitate those interactions.
However, 52% of district technology leaders say they
encourage teachers and students not to mix personal
and school accounts and applications in their commu-
nications.
The school principals say that they would like new
teachers to learn how to effectively leverage social
media tools for student engagement and communica-
tions within their teacher preparation programs. With
a new mindset about the value of technology to sup-
port enhanced student-teacher communications, the
opportunity for effectively leveraging new tools in the
classroom, whether that is an online classroom facili-
tated through Google or the physics lab on the second
floor, appears promising.
For the dissemination of school information
American school principals use such social media:
58% Instagram, 58% YouTube videos, 53%
Snapchat, 58% Twitter, 47% Text messages (to-
morrow.org, 2020).
In another survey “2019 Social Media Trends in
Education Report” (classintercom.com, 2019) devel-
oped by Class Intercom we observe that 95% of
schools use social media to communicate during the
pandemic. 85% of schools report using photos to
share the virtual, in-person, and hybrid learning tak-
ing place. Another 79% use video to share what
is happening in their schools and district. 37% of
schools are allowing students to contribute to their so-
cial content. 40% of districts have up to 10 users with
administrator access to social accounts. Nearly 20%
of schools are investing in paid social.
But school and district leaders need to be cog-
nizant of protecting student data and student safety
when using these new online tools for communica-
tions, with peers and teachers. Additionally, as these
tools become more pervasive, districts will want to
fully understand their legal obligations in terms of re-
taining messages and their responsibility and account-
ability for staff usage of these tools.
5 WAYS TO PREPARE SCHOOL
LEADERS FOR USING OF
SOCIAL MEDIA IN SCHOOL
MANAGEMENT IN A
PANDEMIC
According to a survey conducted by the State Edu-
cation Inspectorate of Ukraine, the lack of support
and understanding of the situation from parents is rec-
ognized as a problem by 28.2% of respondents from
3.9 thousand school principals (Pavlik and McIntosh,
2016).
The things that can contribute to this:
1. Professional training of school leaders in the
master’s degree “Management of the educa-
tional institution” and “Educational Adminis-
tration”
Training of future managers of educational insti-
tutions is carried out according to the educational-
professional program “Management of educational
institution” specialty 073 “Management” in the field
of knowledge 07 “Management and Administration”,
approved by the Academic Council of the University
of Educational Management of the NAES of Ukraine
taking into account the Standard of Higher Educa-
tion for the second (master’s) level of higher educa-
tion(MON, 2019).
The purpose of this program is to train new gener-
ation of education managers who are able to identify
and solve complex specialized problems and practical
problems in the management of educational institu-
tions, their units, subsystems to meet the educational
needs of the state, society, educational institutions and
students.
Normative content of training of higher educa-
tion, formulated in terms of learning outcomes in
higher education in the field 073 “Management” for
the second (master’s) level of higher education spec-
ified in the disciplines of general training and free
choice of curriculum for candidates educational pro-
gram “Management of educational institution” of the
second (master’s) level of higher education (MON,
2019).
In the context of our study, the educational pro-
gram provides for the acquisition of general compe-
tencies, including: the ability to think abstractly, ana-
lyze, synthesize and establish relationships between
phenomena and processes (general competence 1);
ability to communicate with representatives of vari-
ous professional groups and in the international con-
text (general competence 3); skills of using informa-
tion and communication technologies for search, pro-
cessing, analysis of information from various sources
and decision making (general competence 4) and ac-
quisition of professional (special-professional) com-
petencies of the specialty (professional competence
6), including the ability to create and organize ef-
fective communications in the management process)
(Makhynia, 2018).
In the United States, future school principals are
trained in the Master in Educational Administration
program, because in order to become a high school
AET 2020 - Symposium on Advances in Educational Technology
206
principal, you must have a master’s degree in school
administration and become certified as a school ad-
ministrator or principal. In the learning process, fu-
ture education managers trains educators to become
school principals and administrators, with a focus on
serving diverse educational communities and foster-
ing student achievement (thebestschools.org, 2021).
A school administrator or principal must be certi-
fied. For example, The Principals’ Training Center
for Practicing and Aspiring Principals in International
Schools offers a course “Technology Leadership”, in
the process of studying which students should know
how does a principal juggle the demands of digi-
tal communication, social media and digital environ-
ments in a school setting, how can digital tools and
environments be utilized to create sustainable and vi-
brant learning communities etc (thebestschools.org,
2021).
2. Introduction of school principals with the top-
ics and opportunities of massive open online
courses (MOOC)
The opportunity to study at a convenient time, free
access to the latest information, teaching materials,
modern technologies and practical cases, the oppor-
tunity to learn from the best universities and teachers
in the world have led to the widespread popularity of
the MOOC among its students.
Among the proposed MOOC, we have selected
courses in three areas, which, in our opinion, con-
tribute to the readiness of school principals in the
United States and Ukraine to using social media in
school management. These include media literacy
and critical thinking; cybersecurity and establishing
effective online communications.
Critical thinking and the educational process built
on its foundations have become the basis of educa-
tional reforms in the world’s leading countries over
the last 10 years (Abdula et al., 2020; Konoval et al.,
2021; Prykhodkina, 2020). The World Economic Fo-
rum in Davos regularly lists the relevant skills needed
for a successful career. In recent years, critical think-
ing has risen in the ranking of these skills from the 4th
place (skills for 2015) to the 2nd place (skills that will
be important in 2020). The ability to think critically
ensures scientific, technological and social progress
and is the key to democracy, and education plays a
key role in its development. Critical thinking pro-
vides independent and responsible action, as well as
self-improvement (table 3).
Information and its timely access provides the
maximum competitive advantages. However, it is
equally important to be able to protect this informa-
tion. Our MOOC content analysis showed a number
of courses aimed at learning exactly how and why a
person can be attacked in the information space, as
well as how to improve their own information secu-
rity, which will further develop an effective program
to protect personal information resources (table 4).
During the pandemic conditions, the issues of fast
and consistent information reporting about the pecu-
liarities of the educational process by means of vari-
ous media became especially relevant. The principals
have to be ready to convey information accurately, to
focus on the main thing, to focus on the simplicity and
accessibility of messages through those social media
that are most adequate to the audience. A number of
MOOCs are dedicated to this topic (table 5).
3. Certification training of school principals ac-
cording to the relevant programs
In particular, a number of media literacy training
programs developed by the Academy of Ukrainian
Press are actively implemented by the Institutes
of Professional Development of Teachers, including
school principals (www.aup.com.ua, 2020).
In addition, 11 special courses for training school
principals at working in the digital society, aimed at
establishing effective online and Cybersecurity com-
munications, have been developed since the begin-
ning of the pandemic by the Ukrainian Open Univer-
sity of Postgraduate Education (uvu.org.ua, 2020).
Duration of such courses 1 ECTS credit / 30 hours.
Based on the results of the training, a certificate is is-
sued under the license of the University of Education
Management.
In the United States, Media Management and
Leadership is offered in higher education institutions.
The course is designed for 3 ECTS credits (90 hours).
This course aims to give students a survey of some
of the latest management and leadership theories, in-
cluding those encouraging a new sense of social re-
sponsibility. It also gives students the opportunity to
apply these theories to a number of different compet-
itive, structural, motivational, strategic, and organi-
zational issues in the media world, by writing origi-
nal case studies and solving problems in existing case
studies (The New School, 2020).
6 CONCLUSIONS
So, in 2019 the educational opportunities of social
media among Ukrainian specialists are very underes-
timated. The value of social media as an instrument
of the educational process is undeservedly belittled.
Many educators treat them with neglect and skepti-
cism, considering social media exclusively as an en-
tertaining resource. Using of social media for edu-
cational purposes is perceived by American students,
Social Media as a Strategic Tool in School Management: Experience of Ukraine and USA
207
Table 3: MOOC, represented at English and Ukrainian platforms, aimed at developing media literacy and critical thinking for
school principals.
The results of monitoring of Ukraine The results of monitoring of the USA
(1) “Critical Thinking for Educators” on the plat-
form Prometheus
(1) Media LIT: Overcoming Information Overload
(Arizona State University) on edX
(2)“Educational tools of critical thinking” on the
platform Prometheus
(2) Sorting Truth From Fiction: Civic Online Rea-
soning (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) on
edX
(3) “The science of everyday thinking” on the plat-
form Prometheus
(3) Making Sense of News (University of Hong
Kong) on edX
(4) “English for media literacy” on the platform
Prometheus
(4) Fake News, Facts, and Alternative Facts (The
University of Michigan) on edX
(5)“Media literacy” on the platform Prometheus (5) Fake News (Davidson College) on edX
(6) “Media literacy: practical skills” on the plat-
form Prometheus
(6) Critical Thinking: Fundamentals of Good Rea-
soning (IsraelX) on edX
(7) “Factcheck: trust-check” on the platform EdEra (7) Problem Solving and Critical Thinking Skills
(Fullbridge) on edX
(8) “Internet Verification” by VUM online (8) Global Media, War, and Technology (The Uni-
versity of Queensland) on edX
(9) “Media Literacy for Citizens” from IREX in
partnership with the Academy of Ukrainian Press
and StopFake
(9) Understanding Media: Introduction to Media
Literacy and Representation (The University of
Newcastle Australia) on FutureLearn
(10) “News Literacy” by Media Detector (10) Disinformation, Misinformation, and Fake
News Teach-Out (University of Michigan) on Fu-
tureLearn
(11) “Very Verified: an online media literacy
course” on the platform EdEra
(11) Developing Literacy: A Journey from Still
Image to Film (Into Film) on FutureLearn
(12) Making Sense of Data in the Media (The Uni-
versity of Sheffield) on FutureLearn
(13) Making Sense of the News: News Literacy
Lessons for Digital Citizens by Coursera
Table 4: MOOC, represented on English and Ukrainian platforms, aimed at the development of Cybersecurity for school
principals.
The results of monitoring of Ukraine The results of monitoring of the USA
(1) “Digital Security and Online Communications”
by VUM online
(1) Introduction to Cybersecurity (University of
Washington) on edX
(2) ”Information security in the digital world” by
VUM online
(2) Information Security Introduction to Informa-
tion Security (New York University) on edX
(3) ”Media literacy for educators” by Prometheus (3) Introduction to Cyber Security (The Open Uni-
versity)
teachers, researchers as self-evident and inalienable
function. The American didactic experience reveals
that social media can be successfully used to arrange
the work of the teaching staff and students, hold in-
dividual and collective consultations enhancing intel-
lectual and creative potential of students.
In 2020, the pandemic became a catalyst for rapid
change in the use of social media in educational pro-
cess at schools. Heads of education in Ukraine and in
the United States almost simultaneously found them-
selves in the same conditions: the management of
secondary education, the organization of training, the
transfer of educational content using online educa-
tional platforms, social media. We analyzed the data
reports “Global Guide 2020”, “90 days that changed
K-12 teaching & learning: strengthening the bonds
of communications”, “2019 Social Media Trends in
Education Report”, “Digital learning during the pan-
demic: Emerging Evidence of an Education Trans-
formation” and the Ukrainian State Education Qual-
ity Service for 2020. The results showed that in
Ukraine as well as in the United States, social me-
AET 2020 - Symposium on Advances in Educational Technology
208
Table 5: MOOC, represented on English and Ukrainian platforms, aimed at establishing effective online communication
among school principals.
The results of monitoring of Ukraine The results of monitoring of the USA
(1) “Communication tools for reputation building”
by Prometheus
(1) From Digital Technologies to Social Media
(Curtin University) on edX
(2) “Digital communications in the global space”
by Prometheus
(2) Understanding Media: Introduction to Media
Literacy and Representation (The University of
Newcastle Australia) on FutureLearn
(3) “How to understand social networks. Course
for journalists” by VUM online
(3) Developing Literacy: A Journey from Still Im-
age to Film (Into Film) on FutureLearn
(4)“Effective communications for educational
managers” by EdEra
(4) Respecting Our Differences Online (Samsung)
on FutureLearn
(5) “Media literacy for educators” by Prometheus (5) Smart Media Communication by XuetangX
(6) Ethical Social Media by COURSERA
dia became the most important communication tool
during the pandemic. In the United States, there is
a greater variety of types of social media for use in
school education. The reason is that the United States
is a leading country in the field of digitalization of
the economy and the creation of innovative learning
technologies. But the most popular social media in
school management is Instagram, YouTube videos,
Facebook, Snapchat, Twitter, Text messages (What-
sApp).
As our research shows, despite a wide range of
available technologies, the United States is experienc-
ing significant difficulties in organizing online educa-
tion. In order to teach how to build effective com-
munications for education managers, how to develop
their media literacy, critical thinking, and knowledge
in the field of cybersecurity, a lot of massive online
courses have been created in the United States (edX,
Udemy, FutureLearn, XuetangX platforms). With
the support of international organizations (UNICEF,
IREX, DW) such courses have also been created in
Ukraine (platforms EdEra, Prometheus, VUM on-
line).
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