Blogging 101!

Instead of writing about differentiated instruction that I have been exploring in my Crew I thought I would try to demonstrate differentiation (click this link for a reminder on what differentiation is) as if I was working through the topic of blogging with students…this can’t look the way that I would want based on the functions of this website…and based on my knowledge of how to use this site… but you can see where I was going with this…I hope!

Class Question#1: Can anyone tell me what a blog is?
Class Question #2: Raise your hand if you have ever read a blog.


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Tracking Blog Comments

Have you ever wondered how to track your comments on the blogs as evidence of reflective professional growth?  It sounds like an easy task, but it is actually more complicated than you think.  You can’t just type your name in the blogger search bar and expect your result to pop up…Sigh!  The short answer to this long discovery is that it is not possible to find your comments unless you are an administrator, and even with administrative rights you still have to do a lot of searching to find the links of evidence.  In order to keep things more organized for myself as evidence of reflective professional growth my solution moving forward will be to save the links of my comments as I go in google sheets.  Lesson Learned: I can’t depend on the platform to always do the work for me.               

I just had to share this.  Today.

 
From Melville House
May 10, 2012

St. Patrick of Armagh, deliver me from writing

by


“The history of bookmaking hasn’t been without its challenges, but
never was its craft as painstaking as during the era of illuminated
manuscripts,” says Maria Popova. Well, try laying out an ebook that has art in it. But Popova makes a good case in a commentary for Brainpickings.org, citing a recent Lapham’s Quarterly article
(not available online) that lists complaints written by monks found
scribbled in the margins of those medieval illuminated manuscripts.
Some examples:

This parchment is hairy.
Thank God, it will soon be light.
New parchment, bad ink; I will say nothing more.
Now I’ve written the whole thing: for Christ’s sake give me a drink.
St. Patrick of Armagh, deliver me from writing.

Think of that, modern day publishers, the next time you find yourself
working late at night on one of those tedious requirements of
modern-day publishing, like, say, blogging. At least your keyboard isn’t
… hairy ….

Dennis Johnson is the founder of MobyLives, and the co-founder and co-publisher of Melville House. Follow him on Twitter at @mobylives

From Blogging to … Published!

Many of you can probably guess that I REALLY like blogging.  No, I don’t have a lot of time on my hands.  In fact right now I have a laundry list of other things I really should be doing.  But, for me, blogging is like a form of therapy, a chance to slow down, reflect and take a few minutes to just breathe.  I love having the chance to process how things are going in my classes, and even how things are going with my relationships with my students and colleagues.  I also love getting everyone’s feedback on the things I’m thinking about/processing/struggling with.  It helps me feel connected to people I don’t normally get to connect with, even if on a virtual platform. 

Last year I got the idea to try to turn some of my blogs into an article for publication.  I worked really hard on a draft I was super proud of and had the amazing Joan Tracy read it over and, with her help, made it even better.  I submitted to Mathematics Teacher, the journal associated with the National Council of Mathematics Teachers.  In May I found out it was rejected.  Not even a revise and resubmit.  Nope, flat out rejection.  Their comments were super helpful and valid.  And, I realized I really had no idea what I was doing when it came to trying to get published.  Mathematics Teacher is a pretty high caliber publication.  Maybe I needed to start with a slightly smaller journal. 

Turns out California has its own publication, called the Communicator, managed by the California Mathematics Council.  It’s still a peer-reviewed journal, but the scope is limited to California.  They had a call out for articles related to alternative forms of assessment.  I took many of the blogs I had written about my work with my Algebra 2 girls, and in particular my decision to give a challenging group test each chapter, and turned it into a submission.  And, yay!  it was accepted. 

I share this with you for a couple of reasons:
1.  Yes, full disclosure, I’m proud!
2.  If you blog a lot here, think about turning some of your writing into a submission article.  Share your great ideas with the larger academic community.
3.  If you haven’t given blogging a try or haven’t seen the point, maybe this might give you motivation.
4.  I’ll be giving a talk at our 4/12 PD day about group tests, the subject of this article.  If you want to know more, please come. 
5.  Huge thanks to Elizabeth, Joan, and Christina (maybe others too?) who started and manage this blog.  I really do think it’s a great part of toolbox as teachers.

Here’s a link to the article if you’d like to read it.

Blogging to learn and assess

Inspired by our own faculty blog and wanting to try something new with my unit on Jane Eyre this year, I decided to have me students blog about Charlotte Bronte’s novel as they read it.  With support and guidance from Christina Ditzel, my sophomore students launched their own “Jane Eyre” blogs last semester.

My hope was that their blogs – shared with a group of three other students – would be a way for them to engage with the challenging book and make personal connections to the story. I also saw the blog as a substitute to the traditional reading quiz, which can historically be experienced and perceived by students as a stress-inducing “game” to win.

The blogs were successful in many ways. They gave students a platform and audience for their writing, they encouraged students to be reflective and by nature forced students to process what they read, they allowed students to be creative, and they equipped students with some useful digital media skills.

Even though, unfortunately, these blogs were still viewed by some as a chore, most were grateful for the opportunity to show their understanding of the book in their own words and in a new way. They also ultimately found the blogs less stressful than traditional reading quizzes. I will definitely be having by students blog more in the future.

As we move toward a more innovative and progressive curriculum, I feel called to continue to closely look at all of my assessments. Yes, there will always be a place in the classroom for quick, formative, low-stakes assessments. But if they require any significant amount of time, it seems to me that they must be more than just “assessments;” they should be treated as rich learning experiences in and of themselves. Journeys of knowledge, not just products of knowledge. My assessments still need a lot of work.

I also feel called to deepen my engagement with students on their learning journeys. Too often I pay them the longest visit only once they’ve reached the final destination of submitting their work.

The other day, the English education leader Carol Jago tweeted: “The Latin root for assessment is assidere, to sit beside. It’s the best seat in the house for any teacher.” I know that my sophomore bloggers, especially my reluctant and struggling writers, might have had better learning experiences had I made more time to sit beside them.
….
If you want to learn more about my pedagogical rationale and the expectations I established for their writing, you can read about it here in a piece I wrote for the February issue of California English.