Monday, July 27, 2009

Blogging Opens New Learning Possibilities

Catch teens enjoying social media tools and help them gear that spark toward learning and growth! Since teens are savvy Internet users, it makes sense to have them interact with teens from other schools and experts in knowledge fields to enhance skills in high school subjects. As teens exchange knowledge, information and ideas with peers and others through weblog, they can stimulate literacy skills and higher cognitive thinking. Consider weblogs as the means...

Blogging helps encourage teen writing, according to a recent Pew Internet and American Life Project study. Interestingly according to the survey findings, 82 percent of students "believe that additional instruction and focus on writing in school would help improve their writing even further--and more than three-quarters of those surveyed think it would help their writing if their teachers used computer-based writing tools such as games, multimedia, or writing software programs or web sites during class." It makes sense then that teachers use blogs as a way to stir students' writing skills.

"For a group of my English literature students," teacher Will Richardson notes, "the latest buzz in educational technology began with bees. I had my class read The Secret Life of Bees (Penguin, 2003), then offered a new way to create dialog around the book with literary weblogs.

Richardson adds these insights about the success of using blogs....
The "blogs" are gaining traction in education as an online forum for classroom discussion, and to develop students' critical thinking, writing, and reading comprehension skills. Here at HCRHS, they have even more reach. For instance, my lit students created an online reader study guide for Bees, using the weblog format. In two years, the site Weblogs.hcrhs.k12.nj.us/bees has had more than 2 million hits, including a 2,300-word response from the book's author, Sue Monk Kidd.

The weblog traffic has since grown to encompass different students and schools, making it clear to our students that others are reading and learning from their work. This "sense of audience" gets students excited, and helps to facilitate discussion, debate, and participation, even among reticent students. Blogs also motivate students to become more engaged in reading, think more deeply about the meaning of their writing, and submit higher quality work.
Richardson advocates using blogging software for "advantages in control, security and functionality. We license Manila, a content management system from Userland.com (manila.userland.com). A $499 annual license lets us build as many blogs as our server can hold (up to 2,000), and we can navigate between an open audience (a blogging benefit), versus security and privacy (to keep our students safe)." While other brands are certainly available, teachers want to know possible options when security is an issue.

Blogging can improve student writing skills when teachers facilitate students to connect these meaningfully to content. "As students engage new tasks they enhance literacy skills," Rebecca Weinstein notes. Many texts can be used... such as magazine articles, book excerpts, poetry, news articles, recipes, song lyrics and others they locate. Even cartoons can represent bigger ideas. And today students can create digital videos on investigative themes.

Weblogs offer new opportunities in language teaching and create additional spaces to teach a target language beyond the classroom context. Some points which language teachers must consider (e.g. time devotion, students’ privacy, the Internet access, etc…), but it is nevertheless worth using the technology as an efficient way to promote autonomous learning in educational settings.

Amazing possibilities open in science through student weblogs. For instance,
Biopac Science Lab allows High School students to display, record, and analyze data from their own bodies. This approach promotes scientific inquiry and student participation and engages student minds to develop critical thinking skills through real and exciting lab experiences. The software includes a series of guided science lessons for students to record and analyze their own heart signals (ECG), brain waves (EEG), muscle activity (EMG), and eye movement (EOG). Lessons support national science standards and easily align with Biology textbooks. The system includes detailed lesson plans that guide the student through self-paced and independent investigative experiments.
Business administration, political science, journalism and philosophy are enriched through student experiences with weblogs according to recent research in the Journal of Online Learning and Teaching. "Liberal learning depends on students taking responsibility for their education. Instructors in any discipline can use blogs to begin conversations about course materials before students arrive in the classroom and continue them long after a class has ended, thus fostering a sense of active learning both inside and outside the classroom," the researchers conclude.

Blogs are a means to enhance many many math skills in practical ways. "In math the emphasis has shifted from teaching rules and procedures," reflects Jamie Tubbs, "to helping students create their own understanding of the mathematics they are learning. To do this, students must be active and engaged, reasoning through problems, justifying answers, and communicating their understanding to others." Student blogs include...
Traditional writing activities such as journals, learning logs, and math autobiographies are all possible on a blog. But blogs also allow users to incorporate links, images, audio, video, spreadsheets, graphs, linear and nonlinear patterns into posts, increasing the potential for creative project-based learning.

Podcasting is just one way music students can enhance performance. Opportunities are open to add digital backgrounds to their performance. These can be shared online with a wider audience.

While many teachers may face teen disengagement in class due to too much teacher talk or boring PowerPoint presentations, student blogging with a focus in your subject area, is one possibility to engage and empower teens as they learn.

What lesson suggestions do you have for your subject area? Your ideas and suggestions will help start a tool chest for others.

Thursday, July 09, 2009

Twitter Transforms Teaching

Twitter recently tornadoed internet social media platforms, rising to the top. Twitter's now tapped as a teaching and learning tool with opportunities to motivate students and advance achievement. In fact, some professors find...

Using Twitter makes learning more relevant to students David Parry, a professor at the University of Texas at Dallas, talks about using Twitter, a new messaging service, for his courses. Tweeting informs learning space development.

In fact a growing number of college professors are using Twitter as an extension of the classroom. For example, Mary Knudson of Johns Hopkins is sold on it. She thinks the limited number of characters helps writers remember to choose words carefully, cut clutter and realize how much can be said in a small space. Many instructors experiment in a variety of ways. Bringing sites like Twitter into an academic environment is a revolution in teaching style.

Tools to start using Twitter Check out Michael Hyatt's Beginner's Guide to Twitter.

Ways to use Twitter with your classes You'll learn much by watching this video with your students as you begin to launch Twitter as a new conversational tool. Check out these 25 interesting ways to use Twitter with your students for deeper probes and current information on topics you study.

Tactics to add value to what you say in few words Here are tips to make what you say, clear and meaningful to others.

Organize Twitter conversations, replies and messages so they are easily handled Sites where you can download TweetDeck or Seesmic, which are the most popular and work easily for you.

Enjoy a wide variety of backgrounds for a unique Twitter profile. Here are free Twitter backgrounds to download or customize or you and students can enjoy customizing from your art. How you can create custom Twitter backgrounds.

Ways to carry on conversations about specific topics by using Twitter Chat To engage students on a specific topic set up #hashtags and Twitter Chats so many ideas and possibilities come to the forefront. Here's a short post on using #teach-me for demand driven teaching.

Energize students to create videos about content topics Here are 5 ways to share videos on Twitter.

Follow authors of nonfiction books on Twitter 70+ nonfiction authors to consider following

Be a good listener on Twitter 13 ways to enhance your own listening skills

Raise funds when students want to fund a service project.

Ask 2-footed questions on Twitter 2-footed questions spring from teacher and student curiosity and probe deeply into interests as they connect to a variety of topics.

What do you want to accomplish? Define Twitter goals, a tip for successful use of Twitter.

The British government is recommending
that students "leave school familiar with blogging, podcasts, Wikipedia and Twitter as sources of information and forms of communication. They must gain 'fluency' in handwriting and keyboard skills, and learn how to use a spell checker alongside how to spell." Twitter's pushing new frontiers!

Ready to stretch and try Twitter to communicate and learn with your students?

Twitter as a Teaching and Learning Tool just one topic at: Aug 17 - 21st MITA Brain Institute here