Transcript
Page 1: Using Blogging in the Classroom to Improve Student Writing

Fostering Creativity and Community: Blogging

Assignments to Improve Student Writing

Andrew WalshUniversity of West Georgia

Student Success in Writing ConferenceSavannah, GA, Feb. 8 2013

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They now have a worldwide forum instead of an audience of one. They see themselves as writers—real writers.(Christen)

“Blogging is informal … The writing suffers … The mind suffers … When your graduates are the only new hires in their office that can write in honest-to-goodness proper English at length, it will pay off in spades.” (Chronicle)

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Different blogging models

Characteristics of an effective blogging assignment

Prompts, instructor role, assessment

LIBR 1101: Academic Research and the Library

Main Talking Points

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Blog as platform, not genre

So, how do we best integrate blogging into our classes?

Different Blogging Models

(Galarza)

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Structure – Hub-and-spoke vs. Centralized class blog

Rhythm – Free-for-all vs. Checkpoint vs. Weekly vs. Two-pronged

Role – First-readers vs. Respondents vs. Searchers

Different Blogging Models

(Sample, D’Arcus)

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Blogger.com (Google)

Hub-and-spoke structure

Weekly rhythm

Benefits of individual blogs

LIBR 1101 Model

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A supplement to traditional assignments NOT a replacement

Learning Objectives of Blogging?

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Student-centered vs. Instructor-centered

The Paradox of Prompts

Levels of formality?

Characteristics of an Effective Blogging Assignment

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Open-ended questions Higher-level thinking categories

Interest Relevance Attitudes/Opinions Analysis Conceptual Connections

Bloom’s Taxonomy

Good Blogging Prompts

(Cuseo)

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“One word to describe your reading, write about why you chose that word.

Rewrite a passage from a different character’s point of view.

Difficult texts: find a passage that encompasses the central idea and paraphrase.

Explain for an eighth-grader, write a letter, write for other audiences.”

Creative Blogging

(Owens et. al)

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“Explore style and voice in a way they can’t (or feel they can’t) in more formal academic papers.”

“Consider questions of accountability and audience.” (Sample)

Build a positive digital footprint.

Improve longer form argumentation and recognize that collaborative exercises can be relevant to that process.

Learning Objectives of Blogging

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Role of the instructor?

How Should Blogging Be Graded?

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Teaching students how to comment

If you build it, will they come? Involve participants from outside of class Website analytics

Fostering Community

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“Bibliography.” Television Authorship. Media Studies 152. Pomona College. Online Cuseo, Joe. “The One Minute Paper.” On Course Workshop. Online Galarza, Alex. “Develop and Implement a Course Blog.” Inside Higher Ed. Online Garfield, Bob and Ta-Nehisi Coates. “How to Create an Engaging Comments Section.”

On the Media. Dec. 30, 2011. Online Ellison, Nicole and Yuehua Wu. "Blogging In The Classroom: A Preliminary

Exploration Of Student Attitudes And Impact On Comprehension." Journal Of Educational Multimedia And Hypermedia. 17.1 (2008): 99-122. ERIC. Web. 5 Feb. 2013.

Koumpilova, Mila. “They're learning to write, and they've got readers.” St. Paul Pioneer Press. March 27, 2011. Online

McClurken, Jeff and Mulie Meloni. “‘How are you going to grade this?’: Evaluating Classroom Blogs.” ProfHacker. The Chronicle of Higher Education. June 21, 2010. Online

Owens, Trevor et. al. Towards a Better Blogging Assignment. THATCamp CHNM 2012. Online

Sample, Mark. “A Better Blogging Assignment.” Profhacker. The Chronicle of Higher Education. July 3, 2012. Online

Sawmiller, Alison. "Classroom Blogging: What Is The Role In Science Learning?." Clearing House 83.2 (2010): 44. Advanced Placement Source. Web. 5 Feb. 2013.

References


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