7–no 10, wait 12–OK, 13 Skills I Teach With Blogging

Kozzi-little_boys_with_laptops-857x606Blogging has become de rigeur in the Grade 3-8 classroom. It is flexible, scalable, and encourages diversity in both learning and teaching. Handled right, blogs can be used for pretty much any need that arises in the classroom. It has the added benefit of being an activity that students want to do. They like that it’s online, with lots of multimedia options, and a focus not on writing but communication.

I decided to track the skills I teach through blogging. When I started, I had seven, but as I continued, it exploded to this long list that I’m adding to even as I write this post. Read through these, tell me other ways you use it in your class:

Collaboration

Students collaborate on blogs when they comment on the ideas of others. They can also take it a step further by collaborating on the blog itself. Be co-owners of the blog, themed to a particular topic, and work together to fulfill goals.

Developing a profile

Blog profiles must be pithy, concise, and clear. What a great way for students to think through what makes them who they are and share it in as few words as possible. I am constantly reworking my own as I figure out a better way to communicate the gist of who I am.

Differentiation

There are so many communication options in blogging–well beyond the stalwart written word:

  • text
  • images
  • videos
  • clip-art
  • gifs
  • how-to whiteboard videos
  • embeds
  • screenshots
  • links

Students learn to select the strategy that best suits their purpose and audience, as they seek to connect with all types of learners. It matters less what they use than that it is the right tool for the purpose. That’s differentiation.

Digital footprints

Students want to blog because it puts them online, but before they begin, they must understand the concept of ‘digital footprint’. With that as the entry ticket to getting online, they listen and then practice with every post they publish. Listen, try, edit, try again, edit again–they come to understand the right way to do online communication.

Embedding information

This is always a tricky concept for students. Maybe it’s because it tiptoes through html and coding–still considered by many as something they can’t do. Blogs provide an opportunity to embed so many fun webtools–Wordles, Animotos, Tagxedos, timelines–that students will want to figure out this geeky skill. That’s the first step to learning: Wanting to do it. Once desire is kindled, students will slog through the nerdy stuff to embed a fun Voki–and discover it’s not so bad. Which means they’ll do it more often.

Keyboarding skills

Though blogs use many media, their essence remains text. Students must be good at keyboarding to efficiently use blogs. That’s a good thing.

Perspective-taking

Because blogs are published to the world, students will quickly realize that they are better received if the student shows an understanding of life outside their personal bubble. Their opinions and attitudes are honed by their life and circumstances. Writing a post that reflects that perspective while accepting others have not walked in their shoes is powerful. As it is with commenting on others’ posts. This is essential to good blogging. Students who want to blog will accept this requirement, and eventually own it.

Protect Privacy

Avatars are a great way to begin the conversation about online privacy. Students love making these quirky, creative images of how they see themselves. A perfect spot to use tcms-265128_640hem that continues the discussion is the blog profile.

Reflection

The root of blogging is journaling. Back in the day, it was a way to share daily thoughts. It’s grown up since then, but remains a personal perspective on topics, issues, discussions (with the critical addition of evidence and relevance–features that exploded blogging’s popularity). Reflection is a task at the core of many lesson plans. It is well-delivered with blogs.

Sharing/collaborating

Kids want to put their entire lives online. After they understand concepts of privacy and safe surfing, blogs provide a way to share ideas, collaborate through posts and comments–even co-own a themed blog.

Spelling

Blogs include those cute annoying red lines that tell you something is misspelled. It used to be just word processing programs had them, but now, they’re everywhere. It takes seconds to correct spelling, but does wonders for an online presence that will follow students through high school, college, and beyond.

Writing skills

Blogs don’t hone all writing skills, just the cogent, pithy presentation of ideas in 300-1000 words. Most students are happy with that mitigated limit. They’ll write-review-edit-rewrite and make a better post.

Adding comments to classmates’ blogs is more writing practice. Students must stay on topic, provide evidence from the post they’re commenting on, understand the perspective of the writer, understand their position enough that the commenter can offer his/her thoughts on that, and make the response quick and purposeful. That’s a lot of learning in a few sentences.

Want more on blogging in education? My efriend Kathleen Morris over at Primary Tech says this. Or this from Lorrie Jackson at Education World. Or Kelly Tinkeley’s summary at ILearn Technology.

Blogging Platformscms-265133_640

There are many blogging platforms. What works best for you will depend upon the age of your students and their needs. Here are some ideas:

More about blogging:

Dear Otto: What Are Good Guidelines for Younger Bloggers?

10 Things My Blog Taught Me

Dear Otto: What about blogging

How Blogs Make Kids Better Writers

Blogging lesson plan for your classroom


Jacqui Murray has been teaching K-18 technology for 30 years. She is the editor/author of over a hundred tech ed resources including a K-12 technology curriculum, K-8 keyboard curriculum, K-8 Digital Citizenship curriculum. She is an adjunct professor in tech ed, Master Teacher, webmaster for four blogs, an Amazon Vine Voice, CSTA presentation reviewer, freelance journalist on tech ed topics, contributor to NEA Today, and author of the tech thrillers, To Hunt a Sub and Twenty-four Days. You can find her resources at Structured Learning.

Author: Jacqui
Jacqui Murray has been teaching K-18 technology for 30 years. She is the editor/author of over a hundred tech ed resources including a K-12 technology curriculum, K-8 keyboard curriculum, K-8 Digital Citizenship curriculum. She is an adjunct professor in tech ed, Master Teacher, an Amazon Vine Voice, freelance journalist on tech ed topics, contributor to NEA Today, and author of the tech thrillers, To Hunt a Sub and Twenty-four Days. You can find her resources at Structured Learning.

2 thoughts on “7–no 10, wait 12–OK, 13 Skills I Teach With Blogging

  1. Hi Jacqui,
    Love your writing style, and I think your resource page is super helpful for any teacher that is thinking about blogging.
    I spent some time researching this topic also, and wrote a long post on the benefits of blogging for teachers. It serves as a guide for any teacher needing help. I would really appreciate your help with spreading the word, and if you think the article is useful for teachers, please add a link on your post here. I would be honored.
    Best,
    Matthew
    P.S. Here is the link: http://www.buildyourownblog.net/blog/class-blog/

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