As an 8th grade social studies teacher, I am excited about incorporating blogging into my classroom. While the majority of my students have experienced blogging on social networking sites such as MySpace, they have not been introduced to the idea of blogging as a learning tool. My classroom blog will serve two distinct purposes. First, it will serve as a class portal containing important course information such as homework assignments, study guides rubrics and supplemental resources. This will undoubtedly help me to better manage course information and make materials more accessible. A class portal will also serve as a communication tool for parents; they can visit the site at any time to gain information about what we are studying in class and assignment due dates. Additionally, my classroom blog would be utilized as a platform for discussion and the sharing of ideas. It will be a collaborative space that would will for meaningful interaction related to social studies content. Students will be able to learn from one another via online discussion postings. For instance, all lessons in my class are developed around essential questions. A question is essential when it,
1. Causes genuine and relevant inquiry into the big ideas and core content;
2. Provokes deep thought, lively discussion, sustained inquiry, and new understanding as well as more questions;
3. Requires students to consider alternatives, weigh evidence, support their ideas, and justify their answers;
4. Stimulates vital, on-going rethinking of big ideas, assumptions, and prior lessons;
5. Sparks meaningful connections with prior learning and personal experiences;
naturally recurs, creating opportunities for transfer to other situations and subjects (Wiggins, 2007)
Examples of questions that I will post on my classroom blog that are aligned to my content are, "How do different societies impact each other?" and "What are the ideals of liberty and freedom?". Students will be expected to post a response to the essential question and respond to the postings of their classmates. The essential question will be posted before we begin the lesson so that students can activate their prior knowledge. As students learn through their classroom instruction, they will be prompted to revisit the blog and post their new understandings. Creating an opportunity for an ongoing dialogue will create an opportunity for all students to participate. The archived information on the blog will allow students to track their growth in content knowledge and understandings.
Weblogs can enhance the teaching of social studies content in many ways. Students have an expanded opportunity to learn about the topic/ area of study. Supplemental resources and links to websites that provide additional information to support the lesson will reinforce and enhance student learning. For instance, when teaching my class about the American Revolution, I will post links to primary sources and websites that support what I am teaching in class. I will be able to address various learning styles by including song clips and pictures of the American Revolution, as well as timelines, maps, and various primary source documents. Additionally, allowing for meaningful interaction via discussion postings will allow students to learn from one another and gain a deeper understanding of the content by examining alternating perspectives.
One of the benefits of blogging is that students who might be shy during class, will have the opportunity to express themselves via their blog postings. This will allow for maximum student participation and the sharing of ideas. Additionally, students will realize early on that the writing that they generate on the blog, has an audience. Not only will I read their work, but their classmates, parents and the entire world will have access to their work. I believe that this will motivate students to put more effort into their writing than they normally would. Additionally, students need essential skills such as research, organization and synthesis of ideas (Richardson, 2009) to be successful in the twenty-first century. Without a doubt, technology is changing the way that we teach and learn. Blogging is a true example of how learning will evolve during the information age.
References:
Richardson, W. (2009) Blogs, Wikis, Podcasts and other Powerful Web Tools for Classrooms( 2nd Ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press
Wiggins, G. (2007). Big Ideas. What is an Essential Question. Authentic Education
Jasmin,
ReplyDeleteThe rationale behind your blog lesson is amazing! You clearly integrated many different facets within your lesson that will not only engage students in meaningful learning experiences, but will also meet your expectations in incorporating a classroom blog. I’m impressed!
My only suggestion for your lesson is that it may benefit your students is to actually post a reflection about their growth during your Revolutionary War unit. Here, they could analyze their initial response and the compare their early knowledge with the knowledge they had gained throughout the learning process. As your students will have access to all of their responses, suggestions, and the feedback and comments of their peers, they could reflect on the knowledge they gained during the unit, any realizations and insights they developed, and even explain how particular activities, videos, songs, or writing assignments helped them to grasp the material better. This process would also help to hone your students’ metacognitive and reflective skills at the end of the unit by partaking in the process, and could likewise help direct your future instruction (or make modifications) based on students’ comments and reflections.
By the way, your blog looks great! I like the color scheme!
~Melissa