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[Content]
Sandbox:
Blogs
A
blog
(or
weblog)
is
a
website
in
which
messages
are
posted
and
displayed
with
the
newest
at
the
top.
Like
other
media,
blogs
often
focus
on
a
particular
subject,
such
as
food,
politics,
or
local
news.
Some
blogs
function
as
online
diaries.
A
typical
blog
combines
text,
images,
and
links
to
other
blogs,
web
pages,
and
other
media
related
to
its
topic.
You
might like to create a reflective,
journal type blog to...
- reflect
on your teaching experiences.
- keep
a log of teacher-training experiences.
- write
a description of a specific
teaching unit.
- describe
what worked for you in the classroom
or what didn't work.
- provide
some teaching tips for other
teachers.
- write
about something you learned
from another teacher.
- explain
teaching insights you gain from
what happens in your classes.
- share
ideas for teaching activities
or language games to use in
the classroom.
- provide
some how-to's on using specific
technology in the class, describing
how you used this technology
in your own class.
- explore
important teaching and learning
issues.
You
might like to start a class blog
to...
- post
class-related information such
as calendars, events, homework
assignments and other pertinent
class information.
- post
assignments based on literature
readings and have students respond
on their own weblogs, creating
a kind of portfolio of their
work.
- communicate
with parents if you are teaching
elementary school students.
- post
prompts for writing.
- provide
examples of classwork, vocabulary
activities, or grammar games.
- provide
online readings for your students
to read and react to.
- gather
and organize Internet resources
for a specific course, providing
links to appropriate sites and
annotating the links as to what
is relevant about them.
- post
photos and comment on class
activities.
- invite
student comments or postings
on issues in order to give them
a writing voice.
- publish
examples of good student writing
done in class.
- show
case student art, poetry, and
creative stories.
- create
a dynamic teaching site, posting
not only class-related information,
but also activities, discussion
topics, links to additional
information about topics they
are studying in class, and readings
to inspire learning.
- create
a literature circle.
- create
an online book club.
- make
use of the commenting feature
to have students publish messages
on topics being used to develop
language skills.
- ask
students to create their own
individual course blogs, where
they can post their own ideas,
reactions and written work.
- post
tasks to carry out project-based
learning tasks with students.
- build
a class newsletter, using student-written
articles and photos they take.
- link
your class with another class
somewhere else in the world
You
can encourage your students (either
on your weblog using the comments
feature or on their own weblogs)to
blog...
- their
reactions to thought-provoking
questions.
- their
reactions to photos you post.
- journal
entries.
- results
of surveys they carry out as
part of a class unit.
- their
ideas and opinions about topics
discussed in class.
You
can have your students create
their own weblogs to...
- learn
how to blog
- complete
class writing assignments.
- create
an ongoing portfolio of samples
of their writing.
- express
their opinions on topics you
are studying in class.
- write
comments, opinions, or questions
on daily news items or issues
of interest.
- discuss
activities they did in class
and tell what they think about
them (You, the teacher, can
learn a lot this way!).
- write
about class topics, using newly-learned
vocabulary words and idioms.
- showcase
their best writing pieces.
You
can also ask your class to create
a shared weblog to..
- complete
project work in small groups,
assigning each group a different
task.
- showcase
products of project-based learning.
- complete
a WebQuest.
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