I am excited to try a classroom blog to communicate with the families of my students. I looked at the Meriwether-Lewis Elementary School site and liked how each teachers had a link to a blog with some quick updates of what happened in the class that day. As a parent, I know I would be interested in seeing a quick blurb about my children. As a teacher, it seems that once you get the hang of it, that it is not very time consuming to maintain. I can also see how using a blog to promote discourse and critical thinking among book clubs would be beneficial to students. We are working on book clubs in Readers' Workshop and students could share their ideas by blogging. Readers' Workshop is new for our district this year. A wiki would be useful for all the teachers of the same grade in the district to share materials and teaching ideas on each of our new units. I am curious to see how the parents in my classroom respond to a blog. Are they clueless about blogs like I was before this class or are they blog savy and will respond and participate? I am predicting that the students will be commenting more than the parents!
One area that I think is important to cover with the students when using technology is safety. They need to be taught what information is appropriate to share. I also have to find out about my district's policy about blogs and what information I can post. I am curious how other teachers handle this. Is there a permission slip that parents need to fill out about the students before I can include them on the blog?
One area that I think is important to cover with the students when using technology is safety. They need to be taught what information is appropriate to share. I also have to find out about my district's policy about blogs and what information I can post. I am curious how other teachers handle this. Is there a permission slip that parents need to fill out about the students before I can include them on the blog?
The safety issue is one that had previously given me pause when thinking about introducing these kinds of tools to my classes. I was (and continue to be to a degree) leery to not only have students using them in class but to even just teach about them. It seems like one of those areas that every parent is going to have a different take on, and comfort level with, these topics to the point that it would be next to impossible to teach in a way that made everyone happy. I have been encouraged by our textbook and all the examples we are seeing in class of how other educators are actively engaging their classes with technology.
ReplyDeleteI totally agree that the safety of the kids is number one. I had pd today at work on creating web pages. I brought up the topic of using blogs and it doesn't seem too popular in this district. I hope that I don't run into resistance with my class blog.
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