| 
  • If you are citizen of an European Union member nation, you may not use this service unless you are at least 16 years old.

  • You already know Dokkio is an AI-powered assistant to organize & manage your digital files & messages. Very soon, Dokkio will support Outlook as well as One Drive. Check it out today!

View
 

blogging

Page history last edited by Wesley Fryer 14 years, 2 months ago

If you are interested in booking me (Wesley Fryer) for a presentation or workshop (either face-to-face or over video) please visit my Speaking page on www.speedofcreativity.org/speaking.

 

Update 25 August 2010:

In 2010 I am transitioning to the website wiki.wesfryer.com for my handout and presentation/workshop links. I'm not taking content here on PBworks offline, but I have added this "update header" to all my pages as well as adding direct links to more updated versions of these pages as I mirror them / create them on wiki.wesfryer.com. There are 146 pages here on teachdigital.pbworks.com. - You can browse these in page view in addition to using the four category links provided on the homepage. Note this wiki was previously mapped to "handouts.wesfryer.com" but that domain mapping is no longer available.

 

Stay updated on my latest posts by following me on Twitter, my blog ("Moving at the Speed of Creativity") and Facebook.

 

  

All materials, unless otherwise indicated, are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States License.

Creative Commons License

More attribution guidance is available.

 

Safe Classroom Blogging to Improve Student Writing

 

 

Blogs can be used for lots of different things. We'll explore the use of blogs for Professional development, for student literacy development, and educational leadership. Blogs are characterized by ease of publication and a web feed that permits subscription, so people can PULL information instead of having it PUSHED to them.

 

Resources and links from my MACE 2007 and MacWorld 2007 presentations on "Safe Classroom Blogging to Improve Student Writing" are available. Refer to the curriculum for Writing Across the Curriculum for more links and tips.

Examples of and Tips for Classroom Blogging

  1. Support Blogging's list of edublogs
  2. My del.icio.us links for Classroom Blogs
  3. My Classroom Blogging World Tour
  4. Ten habits of bloggers that win! by Vicki Davis
Professional Development Blog Examples
  1.  Weblogg-ed (Will Richardson)
  2. Around the Corner (Miguel Guhlin)
  3. TechLearning Blog
  4. Other educational blogs
Classroom Blog Examples
  1. 37 Stars (Matthew Callison's class website - also see his Fliggo video site
  2. Willowdale Elementary School, Omaha, Nebraska
  3. Room208 (Wells, Maine)
  4. Room 12 Mighty Writers (Seattle, Washington)
  5. Pre-Cal 40S (Winnipeg, Manitoba)
  6. Student/Classroom blogs listed on the Support Blogging wiki
  7. Other classroom blogs (my social bookmarks list)
Educational Leader Blogs
  1. Tim Tyson's blog (principal)
  2. Jim McNelis' blog (school board member)
Blog Reading Tools
  1. Bloglines (great, free feed aggregator)
  2. Technorati (Blog search tool)
Blogging Tools
  1. Blogger - (New blogger account setup instructions)
  2. Class Blogmeister (Request from david.warlick at gmail dot com)
  3. Edublogs (uses Wordpress)
  4. iWeb (included with iLife06)
    1. iWeb Tutorial
  5. Podcasting: Tools to convert blog posts to podcasts
    1. Talkr
    2. Odiogo
Other Resources on Blogging
  1. Support Blogging Wiki
  2. Georgetown Elementary's excellent wiki tutorial on blogs and blogging
  3. Ann Davis' wiki "Improving Instruction Through the Use of Weblogs"
  4. Wesley's Bloglines Feeds (more blog links)
  5. The collaborative Blog Tools Wiki includes many links to blog examples and different blog tools.
  6. The July 2006 skypecast on blogging tool options also includes many links in the shownotes.
  7. Kathy Cassidy's October 2008 research results for the impact of her classroom blog on parent communication is great

 

 

Visit Wesley's blog, Moving at the Speed of Creativity, for more on digital literacy!

 

Comments (0)

You don't have permission to comment on this page.