To Blog Or Not To Blog...
The August 29th class provided interesting food for thought. I was relieved to hear that blogging should be grounded with purpose and meaningful applications. After scanning the AHS blogs, I was pleased to see the multitude of approaches blogging holds. Misguided in my original impressions, blogging represents a more creative output than I initially thought. I plan to incorporate blogging into my courses; however, uncertainty lies with the direction. I want to avoid simply jumping on the blogging bandwagon; content needs to be guided and replace, hmmm...enhance, other aspects of the course. What will I replace? I value in-depth class discussions, observing students' body language, and determining their comprehension through tone. I like watching the light bulb click on so to speak. Will I lose that human connection on-line? Will the students become more or less connected? For example, how frequently are emails "misread" or not even read at all? Will blogging augment or detract from the social skills acquired in school? Another point I grapple with is time. What will I subtract from the daily techno grind - updating my webpage, posting learning links, or the email homework hotline I answer from home? At this point, blogging ranks as one more thing for me to do. I am still thinking about the process. I plan to incorporate blogging as an optional feature in my courses. Nevertheless, how it will look is starting to give me brain freeze!

4 Comments:
These are many of the things I was worried about, but it starts to become natural. It is also good to work on skills (written presentation, voice, etc.) that really can't be worked on through class discussions. The second year of blogging is even better because you can look at your lesson plans and think back to the previous year to decide what should be on the blog and what should be discussed in class.
Amanda,
Thanks for the positive feedback. Do you still use anchor papers within the classroom or does blogging replace this modeling activity?
SC
These are all great questions and real issues that have to be dealt with. Don't feel like you need to rush into blogging - it's just an option to consider. I do think it can be very valuable - as we've discussed in our sessions and folks continue to discuss outside of class - when used appropriately. But - as I hope we emphasized - don't blog just to blog, or feel like you are "expected" to blog. It's just another option to help get kids engaged and thinking.
I did find this sentence interesting: "I like watching the light bulb click on." I think the light bulb can click on in many different ways for many different students - for some of them it might not always happen in class, but it might be through a blog (or something else). It's just another way to try to help our students learn and grow. And - not to psychoanalyze your word choice too much - but I wonder about your use of "I" in that sentence. How important is it that you "see" the light bulb click on, so long as the light bulb actually clicks on?
Blogging hasn't replaced any writing yet for me and I don't think it will. I am just happy that they are thinking and writing on the blog.
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