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Friday, January 9, 2015

Susan Davis on Learning Blogs

http://gettingsmart.com/2015/01/raising-student-bloggers-open-letter-parents

Raising Student Bloggers: An Open Letter to Parents

BLOG SERIES , SMART TEACHERS 

For the past few months, your student, if he or she is in an İngilizce class like mine , has plunged head first into the world of blogging. They've Offered up observations about the world, described them the passions, and discovered new ideas and information shared with others through self-directed research. This is what writing looks like in the 21st century. 
Your student has learned how to find a focus and a voice, to shape into meaningful thoughts Statements made up of carefully chosen words, well-crafted sentences, Paragraphs organized, insightful images, practical links, tags and helpful. Your student has to write to invite commentary and interaction from others and to document the evolution of them are thinking. He or she has learned how to extend the conversations raised by the blogging peers through Questioning and thoughtful commentary. Your student has developed essential skills in modern-day communication.
And we've just begun. Now it's time for you to become more involved in your student's growth as a learner who actively shares her best feeling it (and evolving) self with the world.

Talk about Blogs and Blogging

What is your understanding of blogs and blogging? Show your student what it means to be an active participant in the blogosphere by reading blogs together, talking about what goes into them, considering them the challenges, and learning more about the way blogs permeate and affect our culture.
If you already read the blogs on subjects that interest you and your student, share them. Explain why you read them and what you learn; describe how you achieve balance by looking at multiple Viewpoints. Show how you interact with the blog, how you question what is said, how you spin off into new ideas of your own. Explore the ways a blogger makes choices to get an idea across it to make a particular impact on a reader.
Discuss your comfort level with the privacy and professionalism (or lack of it) Adopted by the blogs you follow, and show how you might handle similar in circumstances. Have a conversation about what it means to be kind and respectful in an online space, why it matters that we should be good digital Citizens online ( Cyberwis to , Started by parents of digital-age Students, is a great source of information). Remind your student, when Necessary, to follow basic Practices for online safety (not revealing last names or sharing personal data such as phone numbers, addresses, or when you might be away from home).
If you are not yet a reader of blogs, ask your student about blogging and spend some time seeking out blogs that are related to the Activities you enjoy sharing together. Learn from the breadth of writing online how much a blog can do.

Reinforce Learning

Ask how it feels to block. Talk about a blog's inherent transparency - what does this mean exactly? Authentically Talk about the impact of writing for a real audience who may talk back. How was this different from other kinds of writing your student may do? Discuss your student's response to taking ownership of their own learning is through blogging.
Help your student reflect on what he or she does and how they learn through blogging. How do they make meaning and take without risk, and go beyond a mere recitation of content? What results from the sharing their passions and interests with others? How do they grow in a personal as well as academic sense? What does your child think about possibly connecting with experts who can further feel that every learning? How does a blog will allow your student to document their growth over time she thinking?
Now that your student has begun to think of him or herself as a practicing writer, how is he or she is improving as a writer? It's importante here to ask for reflections rather than step in and offer your own critique. What does he think he's doing better? What does she recognize that she needs to work on in order to make all blogs stand out and have the impact on a reader she wants to have? How do they want to experiment in the writing them?

Become a Fan

Every writer needs readers, so now it's time for you to become your blogger's first fan. Read your student-blogger's posts and interact in person as well as online. In addition, share them with other trusted blogs, nurturing adults. Greg Nadeau offers insights about how parents can support them are children's learning in the sense 2013 tedxbeaconstreet Talk, "Blogs and Badges: The Future of Learning." I like feeling idea of ​​Midwest Sugata Mitra's "Granny Cloud" concept by suggesting that parents select four other adults importante in each student-blogger's life to become loyal readers and responders.
As you become comfortable with sharing your child's work as a parent, you can promote the child's blog through social media. Is seeking a broad, authentic audience can enhance the student's learning even further.
Adult readers should offer essential positive reinforcement for hard work, original ideas, perseverance. It's importante to realize, however, that the child is the one who must put forth the effort, make mistakes, and reap the benefits of learning from experience. Adult readers can also encourage experimentation and engage the student-blogger in conversations about the topic at hand by asking sincere questions that the blogger nudge towards deeper thinking.

Imagine the Bigger Picture

By interacting honestly, responsibly, and supportively with student-bloggers, trusted adults can help student-bloggers grow as writers and thinkers, as communicators who have something of value to add to today's world. Interacting on a global scale will be a large part of their Lives. Helping them understand how to engage productively and creatively with the readers beyond the boundaries of their daily experience is a huge gift for today's students.
By conversing with student bloggers, in person and online, adult readers can learn along with them as they celebrate successes and improve upon mistakes, as they take chances with what they do not know and demonstrat on how their are learning happens. What better way to stay in touch with them as they grow up? And once they've come this far, we can than open up their blogs to the world!
In the long run, an authentic, worldwide audience for blogging can also help students The see them will work as something worthy of sharing with others - and raise the bar for their online presence overall. Ultimately, those same Students can use their blogs as seeds for a digital Portfolios that will give them room to curate and display the evidence of them is learning throughout their Lives. What a powerful way for students The guiding learners into the online experts and they will become!
For more on student blogging, check out:
Susan Lucille Davis

Susan Lucille Davis

Susan Lucille Davis Teaches 7th- and 8th-grade İngilizce at the 'Iolani School in Honolulu, HI. Follow Susan on Twitter atsuludavis.

1 comment:

  1. Loved your ted talk! It was amazing how simple the actions could be to start a life-long learning experience. I was talking to Lily about how blogging is different journaling the other day and said journaling helped with thinking and sorting things out, but looks like blogging definitely added a layer of creation and thoughtfulness. Thanks for sharing! --Mengtan

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