Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Weblogs in Education New Jersey Association of School Administrators TECHSPO 2004 Conference January 29, 2004.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Weblogs in Education New Jersey Association of School Administrators TECHSPO 2004 Conference January 29, 2004."— Presentation transcript:

1 Weblogs in Education New Jersey Association of School Administrators TECHSPO 2004 Conference January 29, 2004

2 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Agenda Welcome & Intros Objectives Blogging Basics: Confessions of a Newbie Best-Practice Blogs: an Interactive * Tour Q&A * - Simulated via screen shots

3 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Objectives Knowledge Describe Blogs List main parts Blog Models Application Live * Blogs Key Trends Resources Comprehension Explain Use Discuss Issues Building Blogs * - Simulated via screen shots

4 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Kevin Jarrett Technology Facilitator, K-8 Northfield Community School

5 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Blogging Basics: Confessions of a Newbie Blogs: a working definition How I got started Fascinations & frustrations Where I am now

6 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Blogs: a Working Definition Blogs are websites, in a journal format, that present content in a way that promotes group collaboration Blogs use simple forms to make adding content (“publishing”) very easy Knowledge of HTML helpful (not required)

7 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Blogs: a Working Definition Components: –Blogging software (web or local server) –Template (formatting, layout) –Posts (content) –Hosting (yours or theirs)

8 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 How I Got Started Wanted an easy way to update my site Researched, chose Blogger.com Taught myself how to modify templates using Dreamweaver Soon began envisioning classroom applications

9 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Web Log Characteristics Posts are in reverse chronological order…most recent first. Updated on a regular basis, sometimes daily Most Web logs are written in an informal, first person style and are filled with opinion. Most hyperlink to or reference news and information from other sites; many connections.

10 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Web Log Characteristics Primarily text, but Web logs can include all sorts of multimedia files Invite comment and interaction from readers Searchable archives

11 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Masthead Dateline Links Posts Blogroll Comments Hypertext

12 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004

13

14

15

16 Fascinations & Frustrations EASY to create, use & maintain Professional look Innovative technology Many Blog services Template editing Server downtime? Many Blog services Acceptable Use issues? The Bad & The Ugly The Good

17 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Where I Am Now Currently maintain four Blogs Primary educational application is a technology resource portal for fellow teachers in my K-8 district 4 th grade class collaborative blogging project completed last November Considering using Blogs for teacher pages, special projects, school website

18 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Will Richardson Supervisor of Instructional Technology Hunterdon Central Regional High School

19 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Why Weblogs? Weblogs have a number of characteristics that make them interesting as classroom tools. 1.Easy to create—most blogging software packages come with ready made professional looking designs that you can personalize if you like. And most have you up and creating content in a matter of minutes. 2.Access from anywhere with an Internet connection— Starbucks, the in-laws, soon on planes. You don’t need special to read and update Weblogs.

20 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Why Weblogs? 3.Audience and communication—Weblogs allow you to publish to a large audience or a targeted one depending on your needs. And it allows that audience to interact by leaving comments. 4. Collaborative—The ability to share space means you can invite almost anyone into the conversation. 5. Knowledge Management and Archiving—By keeping thoughts or projects or ideas in a Weblog, it becomes an online filing cabinet with different folders, and it’s searchable as well.

21 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Why Weblogs? (Con’t) 6. Multimedia—Weblogs can make use of audio and video, and some can store files of other types for easy retrieval. 7. Hypertext—Weblogs allow for easy linking to research and sources of information. 8. Low cost—Most Weblog software is either free or relatively inexpensive, depending on your needs.

22 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Weblogs in Schools There have been some really interesting examples of use in schools as teaching tools and as communication tools. Online Filing Cabinet Collaborative Learning Space Online Discussion Professional Development School Website Library Portal Information/Communication

23 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Weblogs in the Classroom: Online Filing Cabinet Students and teachers can use the Web log as a place to store assignments, plans, handouts, etc. Susan L.

24 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Students can extend conversations outside of the classroom, and collaborate with invited guests from around the world. Weblogs in the Classroom: Collaborative Learning Space The Secret Life of Bees The Secret Life of Bees /AuthorAuthor

25 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Weblogs can work as a discussion group for students and staff. Weblogs in the Classroom: Online Discussion Honors SociologyHonors Sociology / DiscussionDiscussion

26 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 New (or veteran) teachers can use Weblogs as portfolios or as an archived discussion of their practice with mentors. Weblogs in the Classroom: Professional Development Entry Year Teacher

27 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Weblogs in Schools Weblog as Website Schools can use a distributed content creation model when using Weblogs as Websites. Lewis Elementary

28 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Galileo High School Library in San Francisco uses a Weblog as it’s gateway to students and staff Weblogs in Schools: Library Portal Li-blog-ary

29 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Weblogs in Schools Information/Communication Weblogs can provide a great way to manage knowledge, from committee work to historical artifacts. Technology Committee

30 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Weblogs in Schools Reams and reams of digital paper for students, teachers and administrators to create with.

31 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Blogging as Genre--Critical thinking, information literacy, research, collaboration and composition skills. 1. Find and read material that is relevant to your life. 2. Capture the essence of this relevant reading, give credit to its source, and synthesize those ideas into a piece of writing that advances a personal, perhaps greater understanding of that topic 3. Publish that writing for response and for perhaps pushing someone else’s thinking on the subject. 4. Read some more. Weblogs in the Classroom: Writing Instruction

32 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Weblogs in the Classroom: Writing Instruction

33 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Web Log Options Free Web log software on the Internet –Blogger –moTime –Many others Software for local installation –Manila--$295 a year for up to 3,000 sites –Moveable Type—Free to schools Pay Web logs with hosting –Type Pad--@$30 a year with a limit on space

34 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Web Log Considerations Software -- all Web log software is not the same. Teachers need to find the best tool for intended use, and should think about ease of use, depth of content, collaboration, etc. Access -- not all students have the same amount of access Privacy -- posts can be accessible by anyone, or can be only viewed locally (intranet) depending on software. Collaboration and feedback can be limited and moderated depending on software.

35 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Web Log Considerations Time and Support -- planning and set-up take time, and tech support is required. Assessment -- what and how. Server issues -- local server use is best since files are more secure. Remote storage may result in loss of content. Paradigm Shift -- distributed content model requires a change of thinking on the part of teachers and administrators.

36 Weblogs in Education, NJASA Techspo, January 29, 2004 Thank You! Questions? Kevin Jarrett, kjarrett@atlanticava.org Technology Facilitator, K-8 Northfield Community School Northfield, NJ Will Richardson, wrichard@hcrhs.k12.nj.uswrichard@hcrhs.k12.nj.us Supervisor of Instructional Technology Hunterdon Central Regional High School Flemington, NJ


Download ppt "Weblogs in Education New Jersey Association of School Administrators TECHSPO 2004 Conference January 29, 2004."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google