Hey all,
I randomly selected the selected the Blogging card which 'was meant to be' as this was my goal.ha
It has been interesting to learn that Blogging is a tool that helps you create your own personal web space and publish to the internet as often as you like without needing to know computer programming. Blogs can be used to provide news on a particular subject or as a personal online diary. Blogging can be a great way to communicate and/or collaborate as it provides opportunities for visitors to leave comments.
It has been great to have a look at some sites that were on the back of the card.
This is something I'd like to share with you that I found on http://www.epotential.education.vic.gov.au/- (this site also has ways that teachers are using blogging within their classroom.
10 ways to motivate students to
blog…
1. Hook them in.
Post a powerful provocation to
get them thinking. Get them to respond as a comment. Use photos, artwork, video
clips. Suggest a thinking routine to scaffold responses. eg ‘Connect,
Extend, Challenge‘ or ‘See,
Think,Wonder’. Ask powerful, engaging questions about big ideas and accept
all kinds of responses. Sam
Sherratt’s class blog is a great example.
2. Freedom of choice.
Allow choice. Encourage students
to write about what matters to them. Don’t expect everyone to write about the
same thing at the same time in a uniform way. Encourage creativity rather than
compliance. (I love this point. I struggled initally with the idea of set tasks
vs student choice. While it sometimes bothers me that some of my students won’t
post great classwork because it doesn’t fit with their own view of their blog,
if I look at the bigger picture, it makes their blogs more authentic and
relevant to them. (Mitch)
3. Don’t over correct.
Ed: Actually the jury’s out on
this one. Some say blog posts should be final draft pieces, with spelling and
grammar correct. I tend to disagree. I’d allow students to express their
opinions, grow their thinking, be creative… but I may be wrong! Mitch: My
general rule on this one is if the work is an assigned class task, I expect
students to have thoroughly checked the accuracy of their spelling and grammar.
If it is a personal interest piece written in their own time (most of what
makes up their blogs) then I am happy as long as it all makes reasonable sense.
4. Help provide an authentic
audience.
Share student blogs with other teachers
at your school. Invite parents and grandparents to comment. A comment from a
grandmother interstate, a cousin overseas or a teacher from a school on another
continent is a powerful motivator for students. Tell your online PLN about
them. Add a Clustrmaps widget showing global visitors.
5. Model good writing.
Blogging is writing. Share your
own blog with your students. Write posts that model the sort of writing you’d
like them to produce. John Spencer
writes beautifully. So do his students at Social Voice!
6. Encourage different modes of
expression.
Blogging isn’t only writing.
Encourage creativity. Students might create videos, images or cartoons and post
them. Great examples here from David
Mitchell’s class blog.
7. Make global connections.
Students love to hear what their
peers think. Help them connect with both an in-school and an online PLN.
Collaborate with classes in other countries. Read about Australian Kath McGeady’s collaboration
with a class in the US. Their Uganda
project is inspiring! And have you seen the Alice Project, where ‘Three
10th-grade Honors English classes tumble down the rabbit hole to discover
Alice’s journey first-hand’?
8. Encourage students to support
each other.
Who doesn’t get a kick out of
working together to solve a problem? Students love to show each other how to
use that photo of their artwork to make a Jigsaw Planet, or record their speech
as a podcast for their blog. If they have the skills, let them share them! (I
love this one. ‘Kids showing kids’ is much more effective than teacher as boss
of learning! -Ed)
9. Let them own it.
The theme. The widgets. The blog
name. The posts. Kids love to take full control and place their own stamp on
their patch of online space. Mitch
Squires’ Year 3 student, Emily blogs here.
10. The power of embedding.
Help students master embedding
web 2.0 and multimedia tools. They’ll be empowered to experiment and include an
almost endless range on their blogs. See Steve Davis’s middle
school English class understandings of text, expressed through different
media.
WOW!! Karina this is a very informative find. Well done. When I was having a read through, I keep thinking that this is great for blogging, but also underpins a lot of what we do as classroom teachers.
ReplyDeleteTotally agree!Thanks
DeleteWelcome Karina! This is a great review. And see blogging is not as daunting as you thought. Thanks for your very informative review.
ReplyDeleteI agree Mads! It does underpin what we do in classrooms. This was great information to share with the group.
Thanks Laura. Yeh it was a great find! Cheers
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