Monday, September 21, 2009

Blog Post for 9/22

I have no idea where to begin as far as a final project. I feel like there is so much to learn; most of this is brand-new to me! At the same time, I'd like to learn something well before I teach it to my students. After the first class session, I was gung-ho about trying some new things in class, but then I realized I need to be able to answer students' questions and concerns in order to introduce them to these things.

At this time, I am most comfortable with the blog and could see a lot of possibilities for a final project in creating a unit for my students on an author study in which they would create their own blogs. I'd like them to blog about their reading of a text by that author. I'd like them to create links to other sources of information on the author, upload pictures (and possibly videos or podcasts). The students would also be required to follow each others' blogs and comment on several each day. Clearly, I would need to work out a lot details, but this is a possibility.

Another possibility would be to further explore using the ning in my classroom. I'd love to set up social networks around specific book titles and facilitate literature circles online. I'd envision requiring students to sign in nightly and chat, ask questions about, or react to their book. Again, I think there will be a lot more possibilities that will open up once I am more familiar with the ning.

In order to conduct background research, I'd start with the Education Full-Text database. Typically, this is where I do the brunt of my research because it's easily accessible and reliable. I also subscribe to the Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy, and I would thumb through my collection in order to look for another source. Though this certainly isn't a very efficient research method, I always find very useful research and don't mind the distractions (if it isn't the last minute)! I generally do not do research in the library, simply because of the inconvenience. However, I think I'd rather welcome a challenge which would require me to dig further. I've just never needed to.

Generally, searching the Internet is my last resort. It's actually quite time-consuming to wade through all the possible sources on the Internet, and from merely my personal point of view, it always feels a little less than valid to cite Internet sources. Clearly, I'll need to overcome this because there is a wealth of valid, useful information on the Internet!

The rules I use for checking validity and reliability are the same ones I teach my students. I generally avoid ".com" URLS or sights that include advertisements. I always look for an author or institute that sponsors the page and search the author/foundation separately to validitate the source. By skimming through the text, I can tell if its well-written and reasonable, which also indicates reliability. Finally, it is useful to double-check information with other sources when possible.

Bloglines, Google Reader, and Delicious are all brand-new to me! I set up accounts on each of them, though I'd prefer to really familiarize myself with one rather than experiment with too many at once. I started with Bloglines, and added a number of interesting blogs, most of which focus on the teaching of English or middle school or technology. I thought subscribing to these would be a quick task, but I was quickly absorbed in the blogs and ended up gathering all sorts of tidbits for my classroom. I'll probably work on Delicious next. I feel like I have so many ideas, so many passwords and usernames, so many wonderful websites... It would be nice to connect them all together! It sounds like Delicious will help me do that!

1 comment:

  1. Hi, Melissa,


    I like your ideas for using some of these tools in your classroom. I observed a student teacher last year who used a class wiki for a novel. She had the students go to the computer lab and type their weekly blogs, and then they could "explore" two things on the wiki. She had links to videos and photos and articles. The students then wrote their reactions to these items in their next blog post along with their reaction to their reading. It was a very useful tool in that sense. My only question has to deal with access...do all of your students have computers at home? That would be my only hesitation with having them writing "nightly" blog responses.

    I guess the next thing I would do is choose a text that you want to focus on and then start coming up with specific ideas for that text. Perhaps it's a text that the students haven't really "liked" in the past...these tools may engage them more. Or, it could be a past favorite and it's jazzed up even more!

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