- How can Twitter help me?
- Where do I start?
- Reading the signs
- Who should I follow?
- Universities' International Office Twitter accounts
How can Twitter help me?
2. If you're documenting your year abroad, you can use your Twitter account to promote your latest blog posts, photos or videos and gain followers.
3. Keep in touch with what's going on at your home university and international office - find out their Twitter account details below.
4. Follow your favourite shops and restaurants at home and abroad to hear about the latest offers, discounts and fun events.
5. Share tips with students going to or back from the same year abroad destination as you - just search for 'year abroad' or 'study abroad' and get chatting!
Where do I start?
2. Follow some people. Go to search.twitter.com and search for events you're attending, celebrities you like and things you're interested in. If you hover your mouse over a username then you can click "follow" to add them to your network.
3. Tweet! At the top of your profile page (twitter.com/username) you can write 140-character messages about whatever you like! Jokes, fascinating facts, favourite websites, recommended restaurants... anything really. Let us know @thirdyearabroad if you have any recommendations for other year abroaders!
4. See who replies. The easiest way to do this is to download Tweetdeck onto your desktop (it's free!). There is a column to see who has mentioned you and one for your private direct messages, so you can easily keep on top of things.
5. Tweet from your phone. Check out the smartphone apps available in the App Store so you can Tweet en route!
What are trending topics, RTs, #s and @s?
2. RTs are retweets - if you like what someone's written then retweet their message and add a comment.
3. Hash tags (#) help you search for a keyword or phrase. You can click any hash tag to see the most recent tweets on that subject.
4. The @ sign is used to reply to or mention a particular user, so you can have an open conversation that other people can get involved in.
5. If you type D [username] you can send a private direct message - it's like free text messaging if you use Twitter on your smartphone!
Who should I follow?
2. Learn over 20 languages with the help of Transparent Languages on Twitter - get words of the day and language-learning tips.
3. Look out for people tweeting about #TT (Travel Tuesday) and #FF (Follow Friday) to discover their favourite Tweeters.
4. Do a Twitter search for the town you live in and you'll find never-ending offers and discounts, blog posts and informative bits and pieces.
5. Your university's International Office might be tweeting! Check here...
| UK University | Twitter Account |
| Birmingham University Study Abroad Office Bournemouth University Study Abroad Office |
@yearabroadbham @BUstudyworkabro |
| University of Bristol International Office |
@UoBristol_Intl |
|
Brunel University
Department for International Students |
@Brunel_Int |
| Durham University International Office Exeter University Modern Languages Department |
@durhamIO @ExeterModLangs |
| University of Kent International Office King's College London Study Abroad |
@KentStudyAbroad @breakfastabroad |
| University of Manchester Study Abroad Unit |
@UoM_StudyAbroad |
| Manchester Met University Department of Languages |
@MMU_Languages |
| Newcastle University International Office |
@NUInternational |
| University of Nottingham International Office |
@UoNIntOffice |
| Queen's University Belfast International Office University of Southampton Modern Languages Department |
@queensandtheusa @ModernLangs |
| University of Reading International Office |
@UniRdg_IntOff |
| University of Warwick International Office |
@Warwickhelp |
If you're a university Study Abroad officer, it might be interesting to follow the whole list - and don't miss our list of 100 UK Universities on Twitter.
Please do let us know if you have any questions or wish to find out more about how Twitter can help you with the year abroad, we're a mere 140-characters away!
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