Friday, April 11, 2008
To my teaching colleagues:
You are also welcome, of course, to browse the blog and link to student blogs as well. You will find links to the students' blogs in the right hand column.
In the spirit of blogging, comments are always welcome and will be acknowledged!
Valerie Struthers Walker
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
My new thoughts on blogging
Part of my identity and practice as a teacher is to analyze student work and consider student feedback as I teach. Sometimes I do this more formally in action research projects, and sometimes I just think of it as part of good teaching. Usually I try to share what I've learned with the class in some way, although this is the first time I've gone "public" with my reflections! (And, since I, like all of you, will need a portfolio when I begin my job search, this record of my thinking will come in handy!)
I've spent today summarizing results of our end of the semester feedback activity, rereading your blogs (especially from the day we did a completely on-line discussion), thinking about how we seemed to use them for different purposes, reflecting on the discussions we had throughout the semester, rereading the correspondences from different authors, looking at our "public" site for final projects, and even revisiting the post-its that are stuck to the wall by my desk that say things like "How can I encourage more commenting???".
Here's what I'm planning for next semester:
- Sharing your feedback with the new TE 448 instructor who is planning on continuing to use blogs. I'll talk to her about whether she might offer more or a different structure that would encourage more focus and commenting. For example, I wonder if only subscribing to your group's blogs would have focused conversation. Or, maybe a schedule? The tension for me here is that this feels less authentic. I usually think of blogging as writing that one does as the spirit moves you!
- Developing a community, class blog for TE 348 next semester, decreasing the number of required posts, and making a rough schedule for posting/commenting. I'm hoping that this will focus discussion and make the project more manageable. Since TE 348 is a prerequisite for TE 448, I'm also thinking about this as a kind of scaffolding that might make individual blogs in TE 448 more manageable.
Here are my new questions:
- Will having a community blog focus on-line discussion so that people feel that others are reading and responding to their ideas?
- Will the change shift the interaction patterns? For example, will there be more student-student interactions, rather than student-instructor-student interactions? Or will students think of the blog as "my space"? (Ha, ha... You know what I mean!)
- Will there be something lost in the process? For example, I hope that students from this semester continue to write on their blogs. (HINT, HINT) Will students feel less ownership and/or stop blogging after the semester is done?
- How will the work load change for me as an instructor? Will it feel more manageable?
I'm sure that this newest experiment will raise new questions and innovations! For anyone who would like to see how it goes, you are welcome to read and comment on the TE 348, SS08 blog!
Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Your thoughts on blogging
47 responses
(if numbers don't add up, it is because some people wrote more than one answer per question)
- No experience with blogs before the class (29)
- Heard of blogs and/or had read someone else's blog (10)
- Quite a bit of experience--they had their own personal blogs or had used them in a class (8)
How comfortable do we feel now?
- Wow. Everyone said that they feel comfortable reading and managing their blogs! Three people did say that they were careful about what they posted since blogs are so public. Many people said that they knew what they wanted to keep learning--sometimes these responses were technical, sometimes they were more about becoming familiar with other blogs and the genre in general.
Will you continue to use blogs? If so, in what capacity?
- Yes, they will continue to use blogs in these ways: (35)
- Incorporating them in their classrooms (20). Two of those students mentioned bookclubs specifically.
- Reading and sharing ideas (general) (7)
- Communicating with parents (5); other teachers (4); and with friends (4)
- Finding books/researching (3)
- Adding to a professional portfolio (1)
- In the future as teachers, but weren't planning on doing it soon. (3)
- Maybe, but didn't elaborate (3)
- No. (6) Although everyone said they would do it if assigned for another class! Several people said it was because they didn't enjoy blogging and that it took too much time.
What was gained by including blogs in the class?
- Wider range of ideas were shared in the class. (39) People talked about four factors that we gained with the blogs: people had time to think about ideas before responding, we had more time to communicate since we weren't bounded by the class session, and that it was easier for shy people to get in on the conversation. The number of people who said that blogs enriched participation convinces me that they were valuable in the class. At the same time, I need to think about creating a classroom community in which more people feel comfortable participating!
- Good preparation for teaching (4)
- Project helped them work through a fear of technology. (2) Me too! :-)
- Blogging felt "safer" than face to face conversation when talking about serious subjects. (2)
- Each of the following was positive: development of artifact, access to information, gained a new literacy skill, found resources, and served as a record of the course. (1 each)
- Nothing was gained (1)
- Nothing was hard (14)
- Remembering to read or post was hard (8)
- Number of blogs was unwieldy (7); several people said that it meant that people weren't responding to each other enough because of this. I agree. I hope the restructuring at the end of the semester helped with this.
- Blogs can't be substitute for face to face discussion (6)
- Coming up with ideas to write about was difficult (5) You know I struggled with this! You all had so many good ideas in class, which I wanted you to see as legitimate to write about!
- Workload/time (4)
- Technology was confusing (2)
- Blogging sometimes felt forced, so we didn't get depth (2)
- Fear (1)
- Yes, continue using blogs (42)
- No, don't use blogs (3)
- Undecided (1)
- Make it optional, maybe for extra credit (1)
- Develop a clear schedule of when people should post (7)
- Use prompts (6)
- Require a different mix of posts/comments (3)
- Require more posts (2)
- Require fewer posts (2)
- Clarify grading (2): What counts as "a post with substance" To clarify, I meant a focused idea, not necessarily length or elaboration. I emphasized this because I saw some responses like "I agree" without any elaboration. My posts on this blog aren't always a good example of brevity and focus!
- Talk about the fact that the general public doesn't have this as part of their lives; require responses; don't require responses; talk more about how to write shorter posts; build in reading author blogs; provide time in class; have a class blog. (1 person each)
Thursday, December 6, 2007
Maus I Discussion
Schuler Comic Book Discussion Group Meeting
(Eastwood store)
Monday. December 10. 7:30 p.m.
Join us for a meeting of our monthly Comic Discussion Group, exploring and investigating the publishing industry’s biggest boom medium - comics and graphic novels! This month’s title is Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman, completing our discussion of the Big Three comics that changed the comics industry in the mid-80s.
I talked to the woman who is organizing the event. She was very knowledgeable and excited about graphic novels. She also said that she was planning on having the group read American Born Chinese next!
Since I can't seem to leave a bookstore without a couple of purchases, I picked up The Invention of Hugo Cabret and The Arrival. I promise I'll finish working on the final projects before I open them up.
Hearing on Autism Services
Hi,
I have worked with some children with autism and have seen many families who don't get insurance covered for diagnosis and treatments for those on the Autism Spectrum. There was a press conference scheduled today at the Capitol in Lansing. There is a hearing on December 13 at 9am in front of the Health Policy Committee at the Capitol to get the bills about the insurance coverage for families passed. You can find more information on their website: http://autisminsurancemichigan.blogspot.com/.
On this website there's an email address that you can send a letter about your experiences with families who have children with autism and let them know how a lack of access to Autism Services has impacted these families. This website also provides the address, time, and more information about the bill.
Please attend this hearing on the December 13, 2007 to support these families!! We need as much support as possible!
Melanie
Wednesday, December 5, 2007
Responses from authors
Since both of the responses were sent as emails, I'm not going to post them here. Rather, I'm going to put them up on Angel.
It's really exciting for me to hear authors respond to questions posed by the class!
Monday, December 3, 2007
Trillium Poetry Reading
6:30 pm
Thursday, December 6th
252 Erickson Hall
Food will be served. (And you'll see 252 transformed into a very different type of space!)