Overview of
Blogging
Using Blogs in the Classroom Overview Blogging can improve
students’ writing skills and build their confidence as writers. By blogging,
students can take ownership of their writing, become better observers of
others’ writing, and develop a more immediate and powerful understanding of
audience. Blogs encourage experimenting and risk-taking, seriousness and play,
and they foster an increased awareness of private and public writing. Blogging
blends both the freeing aspect of short pieces that can be written in a
relatively low-stakes environment with the sense of claiming one’s own voice
and learning how to develop analysis and articulate ideas to a larger public.
Guided by clear expectations of what is required in a class blog, students can
see their writing develop over the course of the term. This handout describes
strategies for using blogs as a writing tool in the classroom.
General
Considerations
Although at first it
may seem somewhat daunting when considering the perceived technical skills
involved, using blogs in the classroom can be very rewarding. The learning
curve is not as steep as you may imagine, and many resources for instructors
exist on campus. Also, some students when learning to navigate the platform
initially may resist blogging. But most students change their minds as they
begin to blog
Empowering Students
Students are used to
writing and communicating in the digital landscape whether it be Twitter,
FaceBook, Tumblr, or email. While reading their fellow students’ blogs and
comments, and responding online with their own comments, students recognize the
value of clarity and what makes for strong and engaging posts. Students have
the opportunity to practice writing and analytical skills in their own blogs
that will transfer into essays and other writing endeavors. Students are able
to see their own writing as something “real” with a practical application.
Creating a blog can be a bridge for students between the familiar digital world
and what is being asked of them in academic essays, projects and other
university-based assignments. Blogging can be seen as a gateway experience for
students who will likely be using digital technologies and media in their
future endeavors regardless of their discipline.
Possible Uses for Instructors
You may use blogging
for: •
communicating announcements and assignments in
a format that students may perceive to be more “friendly” than CTools
• sharing
instructor-generated exercises or prompt
• community building
• creating a public place where student work
can be “published”
Possible
Uses for Student
Students may use blogging for:
• responding to readings
• maintaining a
writer’s notebook or journal
• posting personal, reflective, exploratory,
or open entries (campus observations, “where I’m from,” pictures from home, or
favorite book or piece of writing)
• sharing student-generated research or links
to class-related articles
• exploring visual rhetoric
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