Student Blogs Throughout the Years
About Student Blogging
I am often asked what blogging "does" for my students. It actually does quite a bit.
- Provides them with a voice. Students need to have a voice since it is their lives it effects the most; blogging gives them that.
- Gives them an authentic writing audience. The product doesn't end with me and a grade, it is out for the world to see!
- Puts their place in the world in context. We think our students know how much in common they have with kids their age around the world, but they usually don't. Blogging with those kids and connecting through projects brings the world in.
- Increases their global knowledge. Again, when you connect with others through your work and words, friendships develop and as does a mutual interest in the lives of one another. This is the modern version of penpals.
- Instills them with tech saviness and confidence. Blogging gives students another tool to use; we also use it to showcase other tools we have learned. They feel confident in their skills as bloggers and it carries into their overall tech approach.
- Instills online safety rules. We drill safety all year and the kids know the lessons by heart. It is our job to teach them how to be safe and the best way to do that is to work with them in situations that could be unsafe if treated the wrong way.
- Teaches them how to give constructive feedback. Students comment on each others posts but they have to be constructive comments. Blogging is a natural extension of the peer edit.
- Furthers their empathy, as well as interest in others. Blogging should not be a solitary experience, but rather one that invites discussion. To have meaningful discussions one must care about others, which is shown through their questions.
- Encourages them to view their own writing through a more critical lens. Because we have a portfolio of their writing from the beginning of the year to now, we can go back and see their development. Are they developing as a writer or what do they need to focus on? The stakes are raised because it is not just the teacher that sees their work.
- Creates reflective students. Because students are given a mouthpiece to the world, I see them take more chances to reflect on themselves and their choices. It is remarkable to see a student reflect on what they have learned or what it means to be a student.
- It creates opportunities for us to have fun.