Do You Have a Class or School Blog?

When I first started blogging in 2006 I was teaching a Year 6 class. As part of my own learning process I ran a class blog too and started others across the school. We used Learnerblogs, which sadly is no more, but had some great experiences giving the class a real audience and purpose to their writing.

After Christmas I am going to get back to it with my current class and make a concerted effort to make blogging part of the curriculum we deliver and not a bolt on.

With lots of different platforms for class blogs and so many great examples I want to learn from you and hear your experiences. I hope your contributions will prove useful to everyone thinking of starting blogging at their school and provide an opportunity to find out about other class blogs around the world.

Please leave a comment:

  • Showcasing your class or school blog (don’t forget a link).
  • Explaining why you chose the platform you did (Blogger, Edublogs etc).
  • And what the most positive impact is (or anything else you want to say about it really!).

Flockdraw

At the end of November Flockdraw was launched. It is a simple whiteboard tool and allows a number of simultaneous participants. Today we had a little play in class during some down time.

4158757214 301c00b1a9 mIt is a very simple little web based application, go to the Flockdraw home page and click on “Start Drawing”. At the top of the canvas is a unique URL for that drawing.

After starting a new one I wrote this on my whiteboard and invited some children in the class to go to the address. It was during some quiet time this afternoon and I just left them scribbling on the drawing to see what would happen.

They really enjoyed the idea and were quick to explore all of the tools – but it was mostly scribbling over the top of each other. I suggested some children pair up or get in threes and start a drawing together. Smaller groups allowed them to sit and communicate what they wanted to achieve from the drawing and still have fun doing it.

From the Flockdraw Twitter account I have just learned that there is a limit of 10 simultaneous “drawers”, with others logging on becoming simply “viewers”. It also seems that soon there will be an option for downloading the finished piece as an image file added very soon.

Flockdraw seems to have a starter toolset: pencil; eraser; line; fill and text. It presently has a limited pallet of colours and I suppose this modest start will allow it to build gradually. With further functionality such as uploading images, undo, pasting text, multiple pages, clear page and drawing shapes – I can envisage it to be a powerful little collaborative notebook. It certainly will be worth following it’s development.

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A finished winter scene from a pair of children collaborating in Flockdraw.

Other than a little bit of fun drawing together, I haven’t really found much use for the online whiteboard tools of a single page style – have you? Multiple page collaborative online notebooks might be different. (I am yet to fully explore shared Drawings in Google Docs)

The tool itself worked well, but I was equally interested in some of the wording in the introduction from the Flockdraw team:

Through the course of development, you hit roadblocks and stumble. Unseen problems become evident. You must adapt.

But you don’t give up. You innovate. You conquer. You continue forward and exceed your own expectations.

I think that last sentence is relevant to real life, it certainly resonates with me.

Don’t give up – innovate and conquer.

Online Reporting – On the Back Burner

Unfortunately sometimes you have to be honest and admit that some ideas will remain just ideas. I have decided to step away from the online reporting project using Google Docs as I just can’t find the time I want to give it.

It is not about the validity of the idea of using Google Docs for reporting to parents it is just about time. Our first half term was a great unit of work on Sealife and just the normal routine and timetable of things took over.

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Time is Running Out by zamboni.andrea 
Attribution-NonCommercial License

I understand that my blog posts have suggested I was starting it this year, and although I have support from school about the concept I have had no extra time to get it started. The discussions and research over the last year have been hugely interesting as to the place of cloud computing applications in school administrative tasks. It does make me think about how schools will need to better support teachers in the new roll out of online reporting that will take place in the next few years. The processes will need to be looked at closely.

I believe Simon Widdowson (@porchester) is going forward with the idea and it will be worth following his future exploits.

For me, perhaps another year, perhaps at another school.

Using Instant Messaging in Education – Good or Bad?

Every single upper junior class that I have taught has loved instant messaging (IM). It is probably the most popular use of technology at home. But does that mean it needs to be used in the classroom? It falls into the same category as console gaming does and seems to spark differing reactions from people in education. I believe it can engage learners and much more.

I began the hashtag #IMinEDU to keep a record of a discussion on this topic that took place on Twitter. It revealed a range of views, some great resources and ideas. I have archived the conversation in a Google Doc because over time a hashtag Twitter search will disappear.

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I have had a few experiences of the impact that IM can have on a lesson. When we began using Google Docs in our lessons we used the instant messaging function in Spreadsheets. I was able to post questions about the data we collected together – the children responded in the chat window. We repeated this recently and once again it was a great plenary to the lesson.

A further example is the use of the chat feature in a Google Presentation (In presentation/slideshow mode – “View Together”). I created a reading text and asked comprehension questions in the chat window – the children accessed the text for the answers and posted them in the chat. We have also done some peer review on a range of presentations using the chat – children posted comments and responses to work shared by others.

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In my experience of using instant messaging I have discovered some common elements:

Engage, Engage, Engage – sometimes the children seem set to explode when they realise they are using IM in class. They are totally engaged with the tasks. They love using it.

Motivated – when asking a question in IM the children are really motivated to answer it, they all want to get their responses posted. They want to write – that can only be a good thing.

Inclusive – everyone can contribute at the same time. No-one misses out, everyone is involved. Responding in this way breaks the “hands-up” culture.

Behaviour – I don’t see any point in asking the children to behave completely differently when using IM in class. We can still say things like, “No smileys in the next answer,” or “I am watching your spelling for this one.” I think this flexible approach is better than saying, “You are never allowed to use smileys when we use IM in class!” That’s like asking them not to lick their lips when eating a sugar doughnut – it’s just what you do.

Teacher directed – in the examples I explained above I have been specific about the way we are using IM. It is not a free for all, it is carefully planned and directed. It is useful to have your questions typed up so you can paste them in the chat quickly.

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There needs to be more examples of teachers using it and sharing their reflections, to get a fuller picture of its usefulness. I think it has a place and I hope that some ideas in this post or the Twitter discussion give you something to think about and perhaps try in your class.

How have you used instant messaging in the classroom? What is your opinion about the use of it in lessons, does it have a place?