Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Blogging About Blogging

Using blogs in any classroom is something that needs to be planned out carefully. Students must have clear expectations for both content and quality. It's not enough to simply tell them to respond to something or to reflect on a topic. Lisa Zawilinski describes something she calls "HOT blogging." What she means is that blogs promote higher order thinking.

Blogs play an important role in the definition of today's new literacies. Students are reading online -- a lot! Text they read on a blog can include lots and lots of different materials -- images, outside sources, videos, etc. -- which means they are developing new reading strategies. (Which, in turn, means teachers really need to be adapting to these new strategies and methods.) In her article "HOT Blogging: A Framework for Blogging to Promote Higher Order Thinking" from The Reading Teacher, Zawilinksi writes, "these essential new literacies of online reading comprehension emphasize higher order thinking skills like analysis, synthesis and evaluation ... and can be practiced through blogging." Students are compiling so much information from one place, they don't even realize how much their higher order thinking skills are enhancing.

One of the most redeeming qualities of students using blogs that I can see, is their increased awareness of audience and self-image. They are no longer writing in a journal that only the teacher will read. They are contributing to something greater and opening the door for others to respond to their thoughts. Even if a student's blog is only open for the class to read, they are no longer confined to the 45 minute time frame for class discussion. Zawilinski also takes note of this when she writes that blogs are, "broadening the audience for student writing and thinking, providing a space for collaborating outside of the typical classroom discussion..." Students must think about what they write and how they are presenting themselves -- they are adding their own voice to the greater text of the Internet.


1 comment:

  1. I think the level of authenticity and potential for audience interaction is a huge motivator for SOME students. It would be interesting to ask students what they thought the advantages of blogging would be.

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