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Why Blog? 10/29/2008
 

Anne Davis of Georgia State University's Technology Center spells out all the ways you might want to use blogs in your classroom in her blog, entitled Ways to use weblogs in education.  Please check her out if you care to read the entire list.  For my money, I just want to see this amazing tool in the hands of students.  So, while there are many reasons Anne gives for teachers starting their own professional blogs, here's a few highlights that I particularly agree with:

You might like to start a class blog to…

> journal entries or to express their thoughts and opinions about topics in class.

>post assignments based on literature readings and have students respond on their own weblogs, creating a kind of portfolio of their work.

>post prompts for writing.

>provide online readings for your students to read and react to.

>invite student comments or postings on issues in order to give them a writing voice.

>publish examples of good student writing done in class as a show case student art, poetry, and creative stories.

>create a literature circle or online book club.

>make use of the commenting feature to have students publish messages on topics being used to develop language skills.

>ask students to create their own individual course blogs, where they can post their own ideas, reactions and written work. 

>create an ongoing portfolio of samples of their writing.

>write comments, opinions, or questions on daily news items or issues of interest.

>discuss activities they did in class and tell what they think about them (You, the teacher, can learn a lot this way!).

>write about class topics, using newly-learned vocabulary words and idioms.

>showcase their best writing pieces.

Ann also gives various reasons why teachers might want to start their own blog to reflect on their profession and personal practices.  But, for me, I want to see this great tool in the hands of our students.  So, I encourage teachers to take a look at this list and think about ways to use blogs in the classroom.

 
School 2.0 08/22/2008
 

Whether you like the 2.0 moniker that has been attached to new web technologies, it seems here to stay.  In fact, the 2.0 descriptor has become the buzz word in many areas beyond the web.  It basically means the next generation.  As we look at the new web technologies and teaching and learning in the 21st century, we realize we are entering the next generation in schools as well.  I prefer to think top-down.  I like to call it Graduate 2.0.  We need to first think about our graduates and what they need to be able to do.  Our graduates’ needs will determine the structure of our schools and that in turn will create the modern student experience.  So, what is a Graduate 2.0.

According to the Partnership for 21st Century Skills, the skills we need to be teaching include the following:

Information, media literacy, and communication skills

Thinking and problem-solving

Interpersonal, collaborative, and self-direction skills

Global awareness

Economic and business literacy, including entrepreneurial skills

Civic literacy

“We can look at these 21st-century skills as an extension of efforts that date as far back as John Dewey at the turn of the previous century. Learning by doing was a core theme of John Dewey’s work .  . . . We don’t want to teach our students about science, we want them to become scientists.  They can collect data themselves, analyze the results using sophisticated techniques, present their results, and discuss these results with experts from around the world-all within the confines of their desks” (Regan, 2008).

What I find more interesting is to go to the real source of what graduates need in the 21st century and that is employers.  In the report presented to Congress last year entitled “Are They Ready to Work” even college graduates received low ratings for lacking necessary 21st century skills.  “Less than 30 percent of employers rated them (college graduates) as “excellent” in skills that those companies say will become more important over the next five years-critical thinking, teamwork, creativity and diversity. About 46 percent deemed them exceptional in applied information technology” (Schoeff, 2007).

We are all talking about the same needs here.  Quite simply, we need schools that let students learn by doing with technology as their main tool of inquiry.  The very nature of that simple statement implies that students are engaged collaboratively, learning to communicate, and problem solving.  From there we can incorporate lessons that teach citizenship, economics, global awareness, and most of all emphasize communication: both verbal and written. 

I’m a forest guy.  I want to keep things broad in perspective in my mind.  That perspective also allows a lot of flexibility in terms of direction.  If we focus on the trees, we’ll be overwhelmed with the individual tasks at hand in order to move this massive institution we call education.