Weblogs: January 2006 Archive Page

Without deliberately planned, consciously modeled classroom use, it is understandable that students might fall back on their understanding of the blogs as an electronic version of the print-journal, a genre without interactive or collaborative potential. However, we contend blogs can impact the writing classroom effectively, if their integration and function are clearly structured and articulated. We argue they can be interactive and agonistic, but only if instructors work to facilitate these qualities by carefully structuring their prompts for assignments and the purposes and goals they are meant to accomplish. --Janice Wendi Fernheimer and Thomas J. Nelson --Bridging the Composition Divide: Blog Pedagogy and the Potential for Agonistic Classrooms (Currents in Electronic Literacy)
A good overview of the issues composition instructors face when they introduce blogging. Most of the writing in a composition classroom is "forced" -- that is, the students may or may not think of themselves as writers, and they are likely only writing because they want credit for homework. Thus, the kind of writing that composition students produce is only rarely going to approach the possibilities that one finds when people who want to write end up with blogs.

This fall, I'll be teaching a freshman composition class. It'll be the first time I've ever taught such a class without a research paper component. I haven't yet decided what role (if any) blogging will play in that class. Why am I thinking of that class when a completely different set of classes starts tomorrow?
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Participants should bring a sketchbook, journal or artist's book created or in progress, to share online with a larger audience. Participants will learn a range of techniques for creating online books and walk through the process of setting up a free, online illustrated journal, using a digital camera, scanner and free online software. Participants will complete a personal art blog and learn to upload images and text. If possible, participants should bring a laptop. Workshop also includes a guided, behind-the-scenes tour and discussion of Messages & Communications. --From Book to Blog: Creating An Online Journal (Mattress Factory)
Found via the Seton Hill Admissions weblog.
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-- The Carnival of Homeschooling: week 3 (Why Homeschool)
Parents' reasons for home schooling are as varied as their children. A post I wrote about video games is part of this carnival.

In the blogosphere, a "carnival" is a collection of links, usually contributed by participants, and then publicized on the blogs of those participants. Usually the role of organizing the carnival rotates, so that everybody benefits from the editor's work, but nobody is burdened with that task repeatedly. While carnivals typically aren't very selective -- that is, anyone who wants to be part of it is usually included -- since participants typically select their best recent post related to the subject, the links one finds in a carnival are usually pretty good.

I've been having my students posts weblog portfolios of their own work, but for future classes I'm going to think about how I might incorporate a blogging carnival.
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Besides the most obvious danger -- adult stalkers enticing teenagers into face-to-face meetings -- Cole warned that personal information posted online can also be read by college admissions officers and future employers.

"We are trying to figure out how do our school rules relate to this type of behavior," Cole said.

Some colleges have expelled teenagers for violating codes of conduct after discovering photos of underage students posing in front of kegs or writing about drinking binges, and employers often look up job candidates on the sites, said Parry Aftab, an Internet lawyer and the executive director of Wiredsafety.org. --Tara Bahrampour and Lori Aratani --Teens' Bold Blogs Alarm Area Schools (Washington Post (will expire))
Instead of the more common focusing on how blogs can cost people jobs, the focus is on community response to teenagers reporting (or inventing) shenanigans via their blogs.
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About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the Weblogs category from January 2006.

Weblogs: December 2005 is the previous archive.

Weblogs: February 2006 is the next archive.

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