online writing / writing online presentation

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online writing / writing online
22 October 2004
Clancy Ratliff, Graduate Instructor, Department of Rhetoric



Weblogs and Learning Objectives

One of the best reasons for using weblogs in writing courses is the potential for community interaction that weblogs can help to facilitate. While this is not true in all cases, and some writing teachers have critiqued weblogs' community-building potential, I have found that a course weblog (one community weblog for the whole class) to be an excellent way for students to get to know each other and to learn from each other. If your objective is to create a learning community, weblogs can help you achieve it by giving students a space to share their writing with other students in the class, who have the opportunity to leave comments under their classmates' posts. Weblogs are also a powerful tool for teaching students about writing for an audience, as they are public, and they reach an audience of not only the teacher and the other students in the class, but also readers outside the class who leave comments.

If your objective is to help students synthesize information and make connections through writing, weblogs can help you meet this objective by allowing students to take advantage of the Web. Weblog software makes it easy for students to create content for the Web without knowing much HTML, find online articles related to topics discussed in class, and share them easily with other students. In my experience, blogging encourages associative thinking.

Questions/Issues Raised by Weblogs in Writing Pedagogy

  • Having students keep individual blogs v. one community blog for the class, or several small-group blogs: advantages and disadvantages of each
  • Privacy for the students (if real names are used, people can find the students via Google)
  • Requiring weblog posts, or offering the option of keeping a print journal instead
  • The possible feeling on the part of the instructor of being "exposed" if students complain about the class on the blog
  • Outside participation: the fact that anyone outside the class can read the blog and leave comments (and they do)
  • Assessing weblog posts
  • Creating weblog post prompts (and the question of whether there should be prompts, or if the students should have the option to deviate from the prompt topic to a topic of his or her choice)
  • Avoiding "forced blogging"
  • Best practices for integrating the weblog into class discussion

(Note: I will come back to this after today's the discussion and add objectives, questions, and issues that came up.)

Resources for Using Weblogs in Writing Pedagogy

The Fundamental Elements of Weblogging by Paul Anheier

Metablognition: Weblog Course for K-12 Teachers

UThink: Blogging at the University of Minnesota Libraries

Blogging Thoughts: Personal Publication as an Online Research Tool (PDF) by Jill Walker and Torill Mortensen.

Weblogs as a Personal Knowledge Publishing Tool for Scholars and Practitioners
by Charles Lowe. Similar to the Walker & Mortensen piece, this presentation also offers an overview of weblog software.

Open Source Weblog CMS's: An Alternative to Blackboard by Charles Lowe

Falling out of love ... by premmell at Kairosnews

Moving to the Public: Weblogs in the Writing Classroom by Charles Lowe and Terra Williams

Remediation, Genre, and Motivation: Key Concepts for Teaching with Weblogs by Kevin Brooks, Cindy Nichols, and Sybil Priebe

A Course About Weblogs

(this) Space by Austin Lingerfelt

When Blogging Goes Bad: A Cautionary Tale About Blogs, Email Lists, Discussion, and Interaction by Steven D. Krause

Resources for Using Wikis in Writing Pedagogy

Wiki by Matt Barton

Embrace the Wiki Way! by Matt Barton

My Brilliant Failure: Wikis in Classrooms by Heather James

Posts on Kairosnews about Wikis

TeachingWiki

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D'oh!!

Turns out the panel is actually next Friday, not today. :D That's good, though; I get an extra week to work on it, especially to do a better job of integrating wikis. They originally asked me to talk about only weblogs, but then mentioned wikis. I want to devote equal time to them, but it would be disingenuous of me to present myself as a wiki expert. At any rate, they're tacked on at the end right now (boy, do I love that expression lately), and I want to do something about that. Please feel free to leave comments under this version; I'll be posting the revised version as a new collaborative book page.

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