Another Proponent of Classroom Blogs
May.09, 2009 in
Uncategorized
As mentioned in several previous posts, I began including classroom blogs as part of my high school English curriculum this year. (I know, I should’ve been doing a long time ago!) The Tidertechie blog outlines more great reasons to include them as part of any class curriculum and includes suggestions on how to set things up properly. Here’s a snippet of a much larger post:
Why let students blog? The list is infinite: ownership of writing, connection to the world, motivation, authentic audience (not just teacher), multiple learning styles, prepare students for digital citizenship, gallery of class projects, students as teachers, parent connection,….If you would like a true list of reasons for students to blog, it wouldn’t take more that an afternoon of reading blogs to run across everything from the top 20 reasonsto winning a T-shirtYou can even hear about blogging straight from the mouth of students. Why did my students start blogging? I wanted them to be part of social technology outside of myspace. I wanted them to actually see “outside of the box” outside of their town, their state, and their nation. I wanted them to take ownership in their education. And I wanted my student from a town of less than 15,000 to see that they truly are part of this world and this world is open to them. Any classroom can have a great journal with provoking higher order thinking questions, but that journal can’t interact with the students, it can’t ask questions, and it can’t expand students view and knowledge.





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