Saturday, April 21, 2012

Kidblog is not just for kids


I had started using kidblog.org this school year. When I began to learn about using a blog in the classroom I had many concerns. I was not sure about the security of the blog, how I would use the blog, would it take away from the development of their literary skills and/or would the students like using it. These were just some of my concerns, I am sure there were several more but I can’t remember them now because I could not imagine not using a blog within the curriculum.

After researching several blogging platforms to use, I decided to test out kidblog.org. What I decided was that I wanted a blog where students could post their thoughts and learning without feeling like the whole world was reading them. I wanted the environment to be for the students within the course, not public. I also wanted it to be a platform that I could add images, links, video, and be able to embed information if I needed to. The other option I was looking for was for the students to be able to create and edit their own posts. I also wanted to be able to manage the information being posted before it went live. Besides the privacy and management concerns, I also needed a blog platform that did not require an email address from all students. I wanted this because some students may not have email accounts, and/or some parents may not want their students to use their accounts.  


 
This is how kidbolg.org came along for me. The kidblog.org platform allows me to do all of this. I was able to set up the students accounts for them with their first name and they picked their own password. Although I had saved their passwords, by having the students create their own they tend not to forget it. I also am able to insert images, videos, links and more. Kidblog.org provides several templates for you to choose your own look and allows for color changes and font changes to your liking. It is easy and simple to make these changes at any time. I had the students pick which template they would like the class to use. And as a side note, I use kidblog.org in the secondary level although it indicates on its homepage that it is geared for elementary and middle school teaching. Nothing about the blog interface indicates that it is for younger students.


The biggest success I had of understanding if using a blog in the classroom would interest the students was proven to me when I introduced the blog to the students toward the end of one class period. Right after I told them, I had posted a current event article with some questions. I posted this at 2:15. At 3:00 when I got home I checked the blog. All but three students had submitted a post. And by the next time the class met, all students had submitted a post. This showed me the interest the students had with using technology such as a blog. I began using the blog more and more in the class and I foresee that I will continue to use a blog for my future courses.  

Kidblog.org provides management pages, called the dashboard, that allow you to organize and monitor what is going on within the blog. The dashboard is straight forward and easy to navigate through. The dashboard allows you to set up the blog. You can monitor the blog posts before they post for all to read, as opposed to allowing posts to be published immediately. I had monitored the posts from the students at the infancy of the blog, so I could monitor their posts as well as direct them with appropriate language and manners if needed (digital citizenship, to read more about Digital Citizenship). And now I am at the point where the students post are immediately viewed. I got to the point where I feel comfortable that students are following the proper expectations. The dashboard also helps to keep track of who is posting and the time and date the students are posting. This is helpful if you give a deadline time for when the assignment is due. This area also lets you add and delete users, set up new accounts, and/or change passwords.


And kidblog.org is FREE!!!!


If you are worried about literacy skills, students are typing the same information they would in an essay if you set the expectations. Using the same method as you would for grading an essay can be applied to grading their blog posts. Although you cannot make private comments directly to the students and their work, you can copy and paste their posts into a document file and make comments that way. Or into an email and add the comments. Creating writing rubric will aid in this process. Make sure to add in appropriate on-line use and language within the rubric. Peer evaluations can also be incorporated by students replying to other student’s posts. This helps students learn how to give positive feedback to those that may need it. These replies were also monitored at the beginning of using them. Now students in my class post and comment freely. They have developed a respect for the blog as well as for each other.


Can you see using kidblog.org or another blogging tool in your classroom? How would you use it? What are your concerns? Do you use a blog now? What are the benefits of using a blog in class? How else do you see the connection to blogs and literacy skills?
  

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