To Blog or Not?
Well, here I am again looking more closely at this issue of blogging. I definitely didn’t imagine I’d be researching this topic as much as I have. Quite frankly, my initial thoughts were why would one want to blog and how would it engage students in meaningful learning. Having discussed blogging with others and researching this web tool has really brought some light to my otherwise simplistic outlook on the use of educational weblogs.
I used to think that a blog was just an electronic journal that students record their ideas and thoughts in. As a teacher, I would read these entries and grade them, I suppose. I,like many teachers would probably “find it more time-consuming…slow internet speed, the constant clicking from one blog to the next, or the typing of URL after URL ….reading blogs can be tedious” (1). As mother of two young children, I definitely want to avoid taking on activities with my students which would spill over into my family time. Though blog posts are short and usually informal, they are often controversial and sometimes deeply personal. What could I possibly do if one of my students posted ideas/attitudes that were inappropriate or socially unacceptable. I would definitely establish guidelines regarding the content, but kids make errors in judgement. Will Richardson, an English teacher from New Jersey, believes in using restrictive blogs because of the fear of “getting inappropriate comments, flaming, and so forth” (2) The other concern I had was that related to my students’ work being open to the public to view. Would it be possible to control who would “meet” my student through their blog entries? Students placing their pictures, addresses, and names on their weblogs are doing so without really understanding that they are leaving a web trail. Of course, I would discuss the ethics of blogging and what to do and not to do in their blog posts, but there are always a few who don’t quite get it.
So how are educational blogs being used? Here’s a few uses I have come across:
- class/cohort webpage (course overviews, expectations, assignment notifications, assigned readings, test announcements)
- link blog to internet items that relate to course
- posting student work for viewing/comment by peers
- organize in class discussions (course credit given for online discussions)
- organize class seminars and provide summaries to readings
- eportfolio
- personal journals with viewing/comment by instructor (student asked to write their own blogs as part of course grade)
There are so many uses of blogs in the educational setting that it seems almost pointless to try and argue that they have no place. Most definitely, blogging is effective if it is done “properly”: 1) reading the content: analyzing. criticizing questioning, and reacting 2) engaging a community 3) reflecting. A seven-grade life science teacher who has a masters degree in science education holds journal conferences that engage students in academic discussions because it models how real life scientists work. She “creates postings that link unit content to essential questions and that promote inquiry” (3). Students comment on her posts and, in doing so, converse with their peers, get to know them better, and learn to collaborate/communicate with others that may not have otherwise. These thoughtful conversations can extend well beyond a lesson or even a school day. The sharing of ideas and feedback from peers can offer students another opportunity to deepen their learning and understanding. It may even engage them in learning beyond the topic of the lesson. Being open to the public can be advantageous as students can engage in conversations with individuals that have valuable knowledge to add or share on the topic posted. The type of learning that blogs offer goes beyond a school day and school population. Grade five students attending Institut St-Joseph in Quebec City are regular bloggers in their cyberportfolios. One student writes: “the blogs give us a chance to communicate between us and motivate us to write more…..blogging is an opportunity to exchange our point of view with the rest of the world not just people in our environment”(4). Educational blogs can offer students an experience that no traditional lesson can: students are in charge of their learning and their learning extends beyond the classroom walls.
…..to blog.
1. “Blogs Aren’t the Enemy”, Technology & Learning 27 April 2007.
2. Oatman, Eric, ”Blogomania”, School Library Journal 51 Aug 2005.
3. Colombo, Michaela & Paul D. Colombo, ‘Blogging to Improve Instruction in Differentiated Science Classrooms”, Phi Delta Kappan 89 Sept 2007.
4. Downes, Stephen,”Educational Blogging”, EDUCAUSE Review 39 Sept/Oct 2004.
Ronnie,
Have you thought about how you would incorporate blogs into your science courses? Science is quite cut and dry; it is sometimes difficult to find topics to make blog assignments about.
Have you thought about how you would mark your science students’ blog entries? That was another issue I struggled with. How would you motivate students to care to write a blog, even if it is for marks?
It was a nice read. We came up with similar ideas.
Ronnie,
After reading your paper, I believe that blogging could really have a place in the educational setting. I’ve only used blogs in a personal setting and haven’t used in an educational setting. I agree with you when you said that it need to be done properly. But I have a fear of making the blog public. How do we monitor the blog once they become public? Or do we even need to monitor the blog?
I’m hoping to use blogging with my two grade 3/4 classes. I want to have the students of one class respond to the children in the other class. I think this can be a powerful tool to provide an audience for the students. An audience, that is not necessarily me - the teacher.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts.
Hi Ronnie,
Thanks for this post. Blogging is quite new for me as well, and I hadn’t considered yet using it for my students. Reading yours gave me the idea to use blogs in my French classes. Students could easily use blogs to do pen-pal-type exchanges with students in Quebec. I have done pen pals before using snail mail, but gave up long ago since it was just far too involved. Of course, all the concerns you brought up apply here as well; appropriateness, leaving a web trail, how to mark them, and how not to have it expand and become yet another incringement on our out-of-class time.
Thanks for an informative read.
Mike