Using Blogs for Course Assignments Leigh A. Hall Associate Professor of Literacy Studies School of...

30
Using Blogs for Course Assignments Leigh A. Hall Associate Professor of Literacy Studies School of Education [email protected]

Transcript of Using Blogs for Course Assignments Leigh A. Hall Associate Professor of Literacy Studies School of...

Using Blogs for Course Assignments

Leigh A. HallAssociate Professor of Literacy Studies

School of [email protected]

Thank You!

The work presented today was made possible by a generous grant from the Center for Faculty Excellence and Lenovo

Presentation Overview

Study Overview

Blog set-up and management

What to expect when you ask your students to blog

Why Blog?

Increases interactivity and connectivity

Disrupts positions

Makes knowledge and knowledge development public

Can help students take more ownership of their learning

Empowering & Disrupting

Empowerment can occur when students: are given control over issues important to them can influence actions and are given the opportunity

to make change

Empowerment can fluctuate

One path to empowerment is through disrupting everyday practices of learning and engaging with ideas

Guiding Questions

How do teachers use blogging to: address/solve problems? examine ideas relevant to the course and/or their

practice?

How do teachers interact with each other in the blogosphere?

Study Design

Formative design lasting one academic year

Pedagogical Goals: We wanted teachers to use their blogs as a space for

(a) examining connections between classroom practice and course content

(b) evaluating and analyzing ideas presented through the course or by their colleagues

(c) sharing and discussing problems of practice.

Setting & Participants

26 teachers enrolled in a Masters program

85% taught K-5.

Teachers were comfortable with using computers and learning new technology

No one had prior experience with blogging

Data Sources

Blogs (total)602 blog posts890 comments

InterviewsFive teachers were interviewed twice

(November/April)

Blogging Procedures

Blog once a week for 11 weeks each semester (22 weeks total)

Make two comments each week for 10 weeks (20 weeks total)

Blog topics:

(a) Fall: Teachers could blog about anything related to literacy

(b) Spring: Teachers needed to restrict blogging to topics related to content area literacy

Fall Blogs

301 posts made/average of 11.57 posts per teacher.

445 out of 520 (85%) comments/ average 20 per teacher

Data Analysis

Descriptive codes that offered explanations for the pedagogical goals were first identified

Single pattern codes that best captured overall themes were created

Assertions were then determined from the pattern codes.

Findings

Blogging to Reinforce Beliefs

Teachers spent little time investigating or questioning their beliefs and or teaching practices.

Instead, they used the blog as a place to discuss what they believed and justified it.

Blogging to Reinforce Beliefs

GFI

Labeling

ESL

0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

Reinforce BeliefsExamine Beliefs

Blogging to Reinforce Beliefs

I feel like there is so much more I could do to help my ELLs. When reading books, I try to use as many pictures for the vocabulary words as I can. Even though my students speak English, I have noticed that vocabulary is challenging for them at times. – Amanda, First Grade Teacher

Differentiation sounds fabulous. It truly does. It’s the way things should be. Each child should work on his/her personal level and teachers should challenge them just enough- but not too much. But HOW? My kids are all so different! The classroom teacher (no matter how much we want to, or how hard we try) simply cannot do it all. -Kristine, Kindergarten Teacher

Platform for Addressing Problems

Teachers Use the Blog to: Layout the problem and

present their side of the issue

Invite others to engage with them around the problem

Teachers Do Not Use the Blog to:

Collaborate on solutions to problems

Report back regarding progress made on the problem

Platform for Addressing Problems

STE32%

Ask ?38%

RF30%

Inviting Teachers to Engage Around Problems

STE: Struggles Teachers Encounter

RF: Requests Feedback

Ask ?: Asks a Question

Platforms for Addressing Problems

Cherie on implementing “Daily 5” for the first time:

“I feel that after the morning block, [students] really don’t have that much of an opportunity to read. Is it like this at your school? What do you do when there is a specific time scheduled for you? What other things can you do in the classroom to make sure they have other opportunities [to read]?”

Support

Asks Question

Compliment

Affirm/Agree

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%

Fall

Finding: Teachers use comments to affirm/agree but not to question or challenge.

Finding: Teachers use comments to affirm/agree but not to question or challenge.

Affirm/Agree: I think this unit on schema does a great job of addressing and explicitly teaching “21st century skills.”

Compliment: I absolutely love these resources! Keep sharing!

Asks a Question: How did you come up with the idea for an all boys book club?

Offers Support: I think if you thought of creative prompts… they may enjoy responding to their reading. Their manners of responding could involve writing, drawing, and maybe another medium…

Implications

Students will likely need help:

(a) to critically engage with the information/ideas and with each other

(b) using comments well

(c) return/revisit ideas

Blog Set-Up and Management

Expectations Blogosphere Etiquette How many posts/comments per week? Content

Management How to keep track of blogs Giving feedback on blogs Staying connected with your students

How to Implement Blogging: The Basics

Establish a place for the blogs. Blogs can be implemented on public sites (wordpress), private, password protected sites (available through ning.com), or sites intended for educators (edublogs).

Decide how often you want students to blog. In a semester course, we require blogging to occur for 10/12 weeks. Studentss can take any two weeks off. We do not allow make-ups.

Do you want students to comment on blogs? We ask them to comment at least twice a week on the posts of others.

How do you keep up with all this? See our handout that shows how we track blog posts and comments.

What topics are acceptable in blogging? Provide students with a set of guidelines about what they can write about.

Discuss what makes a good comment (and a good blog post). See our handout for guidelines we provide to students.

Documenting Your Blog Work

Date Post? Skipped?#1 (8/27-9/2)#2 (9/3-9/9)#3 (9/10-9/16)#4 (9/17-9/23)#5 (9/24-9/30)#6 (10/1-10/7)#7 (10/8-10/14)#8 (10/15-10/21)#9 (10/22-10/28)#10 (10/29-11/4)#11 (11/5-11/11)#12 (11/12-11/18)#13 (11/19-11/25)#14 (11/26-12/2)

Tracking Comments

Date Comment #1 Comment #2 Skipped?#1 (8/27-9/2)#2 (9/3-9/9)#3 (9/10-9/16)#4 (9/17-9/23)#5 (9/24-9/30)#6 (10/1-10/7)#7 (10/8-10/14)#8 (10/15-10/21)#9 (10/22-10/28)#10 (10/29-11/4)#11 (11/5-11/11)#12 (11/12-11/18)#13 (11/19-11/25)#14 (11/26-12/2)

What Makes a Good Blog Post?

Have a purpose. Your post cannot talk about everything. Know you may have to leave interesting things out. Save those interesting things for a different blog post. It's better to have a clear, focused post than a list of random interesting things.

Remember your audience. Yes, you are a part of this class and program. However, your audience is not solely this class. When you write a post, add information that will help your audience be able to understand you. Read the blogs of members who are not in this class. Find the ones you like. Use them as a model.

Craft an interesting title. While this last tip is not always possible, it is a good one to keep in mind. At the very least, try to write a title that captures the overall point of your post. It will help orient your readers so they know what to expect.

What Makes a Good Comment?

It's easy to write a comment that praises a person. However, good comments will push the writer to think more deeply about their ideas. Keep the following in mind:

1. If you praise someone, do more than say, "I like that!" or "Great idea!" Tell the author specifically what you like.

2. Leave a question or thought behind that pushes the author to think more about the post. For example, "I really like that you let the students choose their own books to read. However, I am wondering how you might get students to pick books in genres they are less familiar with."

3. Make a suggestion. If the author is sharing an issue or concern, offer specific ideas for how to address it.

4. Pay attention to previous comments. When relevant, make connections to what other commenters have said. You are having a discussion with the author but also other commenters.

What Do You Do With Comments?

The answer is, "It depends." In general, you want to acknowledge 90% or more of the comments that are left for you. Acknowledging comments is not required for this class. However, in blogging it is considered good manners to do so. It is also considered good form to read that person's blog and leave a comment when it is appropriate. Not all comments will be substantive. You do not need to respond to comments that do little more than say, "Great post," or you can acknowledge them in one sweeping response such as, "Thanks for the support! So glad everyone enjoyed this." The people who deserve a response are the ones who put thought and effort into their comment regardless of the length of the comment.

Blogging support at Carolina

Campus blogging platform (Wordpress) web.unc.edu

Developing blog assignments Center for Faculty Excellence