Weblogs: April 2006 Archive Page
April 20, 2006
Blogging Portfolio
One item to discuss today is the final project for the class, your blogging portfolio. And among the items we need to consider are these:I really like this teacher's effort to involve students in the discussion of how the blogging portfolio should be evaluated. Blogging is a means to a very specific end in the lit classes I'm teaching right now, but in the fall I'll be teaching Writing for the Internet again, and I'll want to be sure to include criteria that reward expressive and outrageous blogging, in addition to the intellectual and introspective blogging that I typically expect from students in lit classes.
* What should it include? (Will it highlight your best blogging, be an overview of what you tend to blog about and/or how you tend to blog, or a combination, or...?)
* What should it look like? (Will it be a blog entry? Will it be a separate web page?)
* How will it be assessed? --Donna Strickland -- Blogging Portfolio (English 4040)
Anyway, this is a great way of implementing in the class structure the kinds of collaborative, interactive communication structures that make blogging different from traditional essay writing.
Categories:
Academia
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Cyberculture
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Design
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Humanities
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Weblogs
April 12, 2006
Blackboard Blogging: Web Journals Become the New Fly on the Wall of Teachers' Lounges
On one level, blogs are little more than personal journals posted on the Internet for all to see. They provide a forum for teachers to share ideas with colleagues around the world or simply talk about themselves and others. But under a wider lens, the sometimes funny, sometimes searing blogs paint what may be the rawest portrait seen of the teaching profession in transition -- and by some measures, in trouble.This article begins with the approach that blogs are gossipy and snarky vehicles of personal opinion: "Some teachers use blogs in the classroom to communicate with students and allow them to critique each other's work. But it is in the personal blogs that teachers have some of the most open, and occasionally brutal, discussions about themselves and their profession."
Read some and find out why more teachers than ever -- some estimates say up to half in this decade -- are leaving the profession feeling exhausted, disillusioned and underpaid. --Valerie Strauss --Blackboard Blogging: Web Journals Become the New Fly on the Wall of Teachers' Lounges (Washington Post (will expire))
Categories:
Academia
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Cyberculture
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Ethics
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Rhetoric
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Technology
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Weblogs
