Suggested Template (Don't need to use bullets, but please include as much of the information as possible)
- Description of assignment or project
- Tool(s) with link to their site
- Link to the project (if possible)
- Explanation for how this assignment/project increased digital literacy/awareness with staff or students.
- Contact
Blogging: Start Slow in Steps
What:
It's not easy dipping into new waters, so how could one start? For blogging, I started slow and have documented these steps in my blog in several posts. A summary with links is in the post, Timid to Blog? Try this... Briefly, we started with notecards and sticky notes, responding first to a prompt on a notecard and passing that around for peers to comment, and finally discussing which comments were helpful to the author or others. Next we commented on stories in Tween Tribune first together, then in partners, discussing how our comments furthered the conversation. We then started class blogs. Have there been problems? Here is a summary for some issues.
Tools:
Preparation:
Netiquette: Internet Safety Sample
Get ideas; Practice comments in safe settings -- http://tweentribune.com/ http://youthvoices.net/
Response guides: http://youthvoices.net/guides
Continued Support:
Blogging Tips: Sue Waters at Edublogs
Your PLN !
Link:
The Summary: Timid to Blog? Try this... with pictures and Marsha's take here.
Awareness
Students developed the important skill of commenting to further a conversation and began to develop their own ideas for "blogging a conversation." The notecard/comment activity helped students understand the blog conversation by creating the artifact for a physical world blog. When my PLN friend, Marsha Ratzel, read our story, she added her own twist (a gallery walk of the physical blog and blogging licenses). This is how the story grows; what can you add?
Contact
Sheri Edwards
Twitter: grammasheri
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