Blogging and eboards: Adding an online component to classroom learning David Polochanin, January 9, 2010 Connecticut Writing Project.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Register Laulima Workshop for Instructors Solutions to help you engage your students through Laulima.
Advertisements

Centra Quick Tips Press button or Ctrl Key to speak Use button to ask questions Use button for Yes, button for No Use buttons for feedback - Step Out Text.
Jennifer Garich READ 5493 May 5, What is Authentic Writing? Reflect real life experiences “A writer who is writing to a real reader...” (Duke et.
Interactive Egypt Map Project Overview Teacher Planning Work Samples & Reflections Teaching Resources Assessment & Standards Classroom Teacher Guide Pre-service.
Blogging and Instant Messaging A very brief introduction! SUNY Potsdam IT Fair 2005 Jenica P. Rogers August 25, 2005.
© Copyright 2009 by The Source for Learning, Inc. All rights reserved. A Safe Journey to the Edge: Intro to Web 2.0 Tools Finding your way: 1.Find the.
Moodle, Blogs, Wikis and More Exploring Web 2.0 Tools: The 2nd Generation of the World Wide Web.
Engineering Village ™ ® Basic Searching On Compendex ®
The Breakfast Book Club Negotiating the Borders Between Adolescent and Adult Literacy + = Books, Bagels, and Becoming Adult Readers: Partners in Learning.
Cathy Clarke, Digital Media Specialist Simon Ting, Instructional Developer.
21st Century Teaching Scholarship & Certificate Program Workshop 3 Bon Education.
Educational Blogs A Way to Reach the Digital Native Wando High School.
Weblogging ED-P 790 Summer 2007 Leanna Madill. What is a weblog? A blog (a portmanteau of web log) is a website where entries are written in chronological.
Syllabus 2004 San Francisco1 Personal Information Technologies Stuart J. Glogoff, Adjunct Professor School of Information Resources and Library Science,
Register Laulima Workshop for Instructors Solutions to help you engage your students through Laulima.
Online Learning Communities Presented by Angel Somers/Media Specialist
Blogging. What is Blogging? "Blog" is an abbreviated version of "web-log,” A blog is a frequently updatable, personal website featuring diary-type commentary.
Books such as The Long Thaw explain issues like climate change in language that is easy for the general public to understand. Authors.
Blogger & KidBlog By Whitney Alley & Jorden Dickmeyer.
The Blogging Librarian: Avoiding Institutional Inertia Case study Kara Jones Research Publications Librarian Library.
To BLOG or Not to BLOG? Created by Jan North Mansfield ISD (used by permission)
 A blog is a personal online journal that is frequently updated and intended for general public consumption. Blogs are defined by their format: a series.
Welcome to the Home of the Bilingual Bobcats!
“Knowledge” Do Now: As a teacher, what does this statement make think about or feel: “He Who Can Does He Who cannot Teaches” George Bernard Shaw.
Samira M. Bakr, PhD Academic visitor Reading University, UK 22/02/ E-Learning Conference Samira Bakr.
According to the APA Publication Manual, some online books, journals, and magazines have added “digital object identifier (doi) numbers to their bibliographic.
Liblogarian Annual LIS symposium 2008 Annette le Roux.
Social Networking Sites Workshop Kyungmee Lee Minoo Ardeshiri Feb 16, 2011.
Blogs and Wikis in an Ed. Tech Course for Teachers Describe educational uses for collaborative software tools such as Webblogs and Wiki Webs that allow.
 Rigor and Acceleration in World Languages Through Literacy HCPSS World Languages November 24,
Daena J. Goldsmith, Professor & Chair Rhetoric & Media Studies Teaching with Social Media.
Glogster EETT Training Mathew Swerdloff November 30, 2010.
Using Blogs in the Classroom Presenters: Gail Gaetz & Chery Takkunen Education Department.
Blogging and learner autonomy Three questions Do you have enough computers with Internet access for all the students in your school? Do your students use.
1 Success at the Core An Introduction Success at the Core and CCSS Implementation April 23, 2013.
ELECTRONIC RESOURCES WORKSHOP March 29, 2013 Databases and eBooks A subscription database is a collection of regularly updated scholarly and professional.
Finding Credible Sources
What did we do last time? Research game plan Boolean CQ Researcher Scholarly v. Popular Academic Search Complete (EBSCOhost)
 A blog is a personal online journal that is frequently updated and intended for general public consumption. Blogs are defined by their format: a series.
The Read Write Web Chapter One Presentation By Shontae Dandridge October 20, 2011.
Agenda Identify and define the key elements of formative assessment. Determine the relationship between the key elements of formative assessment and student.
Colonial Life Web Quest By Kimberly Kamp Home Introduction Task Process Evaluation Conclusion Teachers Website Evaluation.
MJM22 Digital Practice and Pedagogy Week 9 Collaboration Tools.
Blogs: Bizarre and Brilliant Lib Catawba Spring 2004 Susan Dudley.
Internet for Teaching and Learning. Understanding the Web The Web is A collection of publicly accessible pages (web sites) on the Internet All use the.
Using Blogs in the Classroom Presented By: Patrick Egan.
Blogging 101: Blogging for the Absolute Beginner Gail Desler & Kathleen Watt Technology Services.
Welcome To MOODLE Getting Started. Introductions Christa McLaughlin – High School math teacher and high school lead teacher of technology Jason Grubbs.
Blogs and Wikis Rachel Lacy Instructional Technology Services of Central Ohio, Inc. December 11, 2008 SOITA Dayton, Ohio.
RESEARCH 101 AFE: Advertising Savvy Use of the Internet Playing It Safe (and Smart!) With Databases.
DIGITAL BOOK REPORTS USING WALL WISHER AND VOKI Lindsay, Laura, Caroline, and Lauren.
Beyond the Basal: Day #4, Reading/Writing Connection Everything we know as writers, we know as readers first. - Katy Ray Wood.
What, Why and How of Blogging Bushra Faisal March 27, 2009.
Brought to you by the Geendale ICT committee Slides can be found at sciencepw.wikispaces.com Originated from the Hawaiian language. The.
Blogging in the Multimodal Classroom. Making Connections O Brainstorm: O Write down ways that you have used, or observed, a journal in a classroom. or.
Web Authoring: Creating an Educational Blog David Wicks Assistant Professor Director of ITS 1.
What is a wiki? Online Collaboration with Wikis. A wiki is an easy-to-use free web page that multiple people can edit.
Developing Digital Teachers and Learners for 21 st Century K-12 Classrooms Humphreys County Katie Butler Tec Teach K-12.
CREATE, IMPLEMENT AND ENJOY! Blogs,Wikis & RSS Readers.
Welcome to "Enrich Exit Project Writing with Technology" (Middle School) ELA Institute.
Online Subscription Database Workshop Vista Murrieta High School Library Deborah Jacobs Teacher Librarian.
Donna Waters Felecia Wesley The Man with the visio n Tim Berners-Lee began the development of his vision of the World Wide Web in Before the creation.
Propel Your Stories - and More - to the Next Level With Content Curation Melony Shemberger, Ed.D. Assistant Professor of Journalism and Mass Communication.
Christa Marsh Southern Arkansas University Biology Professor.
Presenter: Samantha Instructor: Kate Student ID:
Strategic Writing and Instruction for Teachers (SWIFT) DAY THREE Writing Your Way to Wisdom.
Theresa Gabor, CCCOE Web 2.0 What You Need to Know.
Portfolio By: Fatima Henriquez. Balanced Literacy  Identify and explain the components of a balanced literacy program. Balanced Literacy is a framework.
(Asst. Prof. Dr. Gültekin Boran)
Dazed, Amazed and Googled
Presentation transcript:

Blogging and eboards: Adding an online component to classroom learning David Polochanin, January 9, 2010 Connecticut Writing Project

Take a quick survey Access the link from my blog:

My background 1995 UConn graduate, BA in Journalism State staff reporter, The Providence Journal, Connecticut Writing Project Teacher-Consultant since 1999 Freelance columnist, The Boston Globe, Correspondent-intern, Boston Globe, 1994 Correspondent, freelancer for Hartford Courant since 1993 Other recent freelance work has appeared in Education Week, Middle Ground and The Christian Science Monitor Teacher of middle school Language Arts at Gideon Welles School, Glastonbury, since 2001

About eboards Eboards are online message boards They can, and probably should, be moderated It costs $39 to purchase use of an eboard for a year (multiple teachers can use the same one) Underthesamesky.eboard.com Cwptraining.eboard.com

What is blogging? Blogging, or weblogging, involves writing for a web site that contains an online personal journal with reflections, comments, and often hyperlinks provided by the writer. Source:

Everybody’s got one…

Why Blog? A brief research base Blogging is writing for an authentic purpose. “Authentic literacy activities in the classroom replicate and reflect literacy activities that occur in people's lives outside of school and instructional contexts. ” Duke, Purcell-Gates, Hall, Tower, International Reading Association, 2006 Blogging is response to writing. “Students need to hear the responses of others to their writing, to discover what they do or do not understand.” – Donald Graves, University of New Hampshire professor emeritus and author of A Fresh Look at Writing, 1994 Blogging is relevant for the adolescent population. “Content creation by teenagers continues to grow, with 64 % of online teenagers ages 12 through 17 engaging in at least one type of content creation, up from 57 % of online teens in Girls…dominate most elements of content creation. Some 35 % of all teen girls blog, compared with 20% of online boys.” Pew Internet and American Life Project, 2007

One guy’s theory about blogging… “I think the pleasure of completed work is what makes blogging so popular. You have to believe most bloggers have few if any actual readers. The writers are in it for other reasons. Blogging is like work, but without coworkers thwarting you at every turn. All you get is the pleasure of a completed task.” (Scott Adams, creator of Dilbert cartoon)Scott Adams

One woman’s theory about blogging… Deborah Branscum, a contributing editor to Newsweek, wrote a feature on blogging for the magazine and contributes to Fortune.com, Macworld, Wired, PC World. Here are 4 reasons she’s a fan of blogging. Creative freedom. Part of a blog's allure is its unmediated quality.There's an enormous freedom in being able to present yourself precisely as you want to, however sloppily or irrationally or erratically. Instantaneity. "With a Weblog, you hit the send key and it's out there.“ Interactivity. "It's a kick to get feedback from people you've never heard of who stumble on your Weblog," she says. Source:

What you will do today Explore blogs online and identify characteristics of quality blogs Create a personal or professional blog using Blogger.com and respond to others on their blogs Discuss and consider how to use blogs in the classroom - as an instructional tool and as a component of your academic program

Sample blogs

Explore blogs – first activity Take minutes on your own to explore blogs Record, individually or with a partner, some characteristics of what makes a blog effective. Post to eboard. underthesamesky.eboard.com (password = share) Share conclusions with the group.

Characteristics of effective blogs - continued Surf the Web for blogs of news organizations and media sites, favorite authors, celebrities, etc. If you need a little more direction, check out TIME Magazine’s 2009 Best Blog site: Or Forbes Magazine’s Best Blogs: Post your responses to this “eboard” underthesamesky.eboard.com

Create your own blog – see instructions on sep. paper Directions: Setting up your blog.doc Link to my blog example:

Final survey Please return to my blog to take post- workshop survey:

“Without the New York Times, there is no blog community. They’d have nothing to blog about.” (Malcolm Gladwell, author of Blink and The Tipping Point)Malcolm Gladwell

Additional resources (Two articles about blogging and journalism) We’ve Got Blog: How Weblogs Are Changing Our Culture (book, Perseus Publishing) The Poynter Institute: (The preeminent journalism research site in the U.S.) High School Broadcast Journalism Project: National Writing Project: Connecticut Writing Project: