Saturday, August 30, 2008

Resources for Blogging... for Teachers, Administrators, and Students














Are you considering blogging… as a teacher? As an administrator? As a student activity?


If your answer is yes to any of these questions, you will probably want to examine some helpful resources. The Moving Forward wiki -- administered by Dr. Scott McLeod -- lists resources dealing with moving into the 21st century. One section of this wiki -- http://movingforward.wikispaces.com/Blogs -- contains resources for K-12 blogging, including real-life examples for students, teachers, and administrators. You’ll find helpful information here whether you’re beginning a blog for the first time or you’re an experienced blogger.

Resources include a list of the reasons why blogging is such a good tool for teaching as well as reasons why administrators should blog. Guidance is provided for teachers who blog and those who use blogging as an instructional tool. A workshop from TeachersFirst for teachers who are starting blogging in the classroom includes safety suggestions. A variety of tools for setting up blogs either for an individual blog or for a classroom blog can be examined.

Links to many examples of blogs are available. You can read blogs from elementary classrooms, elementary teachers, secondary classrooms, secondary teachers, principals, central office personnel, librarians, and counselors. There are also blogs focusing on music education, K-12 computer science, and special education.

I am convinced you will find lots of ideas at this site to help you in your blogging activities.


If you would like to listen to this blog entry rather than read it, select play on the Gabcast player below.

Gabcast! Learning and Teaching in the 21st Century #11



Photo: http://flickr.com/photos/spadgy/313251515/
License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/deed.en

2 comments:

Scott McLeod said...

Thanks so much for publicizing the Moving Forward wiki. I hope that you and others will contribute your expertise and experience to the site. Together we make it stronger!

Jo Schiffbauer said...

Good point, Scott. Next time I'll urge that we all contribute!