Three Approaches to Classroom Blogging

Last week I received a suggestion from someone who wanted me to offer a webinar about classroom blogging. That is one of the most common requests for workshops so it makes sense to offer that as a webinar in the future. If I do decide to offer that workshop as a webinar I will make an announcement here. In the meantime, the basic outline of my approach to classroom blogs is this; distribution, discussion, and demonstration.

Distributing:
At its most basic blogging is
done for the purpose of quickly and easily distributing information to
others. In the context of education this means distributing information
to students and their parents. That information could be anything from
assignment due dates to course notes to articles and videos that
supplement your classroom instruction. Here’s a cartoon explanation that I made about one of the benefits of teachers having blogs. 
Discussing:
This is where blogging
becomes more than just an exercise in disseminating information. As a
teacher you can post prompts to which your students write replies in the
form of comments. Better yet, make students authors on a blog and have
them post prompts for their classmates to respond to. The prompts could
be in the form of a reflection written by a student, a thought-provoking
article from the web accompanied by questions, an image, a video, or
perhaps an embedded VoiceThread
The great thing about using blogs for classroom discussions
is that it provides students with more time to reflect on what they’re
being asked before sharing their responses. Blog discussions also
provides a forum for shy students to express themselves with written
words instead of possibly staying out of a in-classroom conversation. 
Demonstrating:
By making students
authors on a group blog or by having them maintain their own individual
blogs they can demonstrate what they’ve found through research, what
they learned, and what they have created to demonstrate their learning.
In other words, your students’ blogs become digital portfolios of what
they have done in your classroom. One of the benefits of putting these
portfolios on the web is that other students can view and learn from
them. Another benefit is that now other teachers, school administrators,
and your students’ families can quickly discover the great work your
students have done.
If you’re wondering about the picture, it’s of my newly adopted dog Max. I just wanted to include a picture of him in a blog post. This was the first time that he was relaxed enough to actually nap in his new home.
Archives

Thank You Readers for 14 Amazing Years!