The next morning we got on the laptops and I showed my students how to log on. We created our posts together and then practiced giving each other comments. It was a bit overwhelming because I had to approve all their posts and comments in that moment so they could respond to each other but we managed. Later that evening I pulled out my computer to show my mom our classroom blog and I had 27 comments awaiting approval all submitted after school hours! I had several students blogging from home! I wanted this excitement to stick! As I was reading, approving, and replying I started to realize that not only were my students being forced to work on their writing skills, but I was spending hours giving constructive feedback. I immediately recognized the difference between the authentic comments I was replying with and the check marks and smiley faces I was so used to giving on paper.
As I sat back and watched as my brilliant fourth graders helped each other through the blogging experience I found myself in the midst of a wonderful teaching opportunity. One of my girls posted in her blog that her grandmother made homemade pasta with her secret recipe, while another girl commented saying that her aunt had a secret recipe as well. A third student commented on the post asking for the secret recipes. I then posed the question, "Why should you never post secret recipes online?" The first response back was, "We are sorry Miss Montambault. It won't happen again." I brought this up the next morning in class and we talked about how everything on the internet stays there forever. The girls soon caught on and agreed that secret recipes are best kept off the internet.
So far it has been a wonderful experience. I am learning as I go which is a little scary. I like to have a plan, and if I am being honest I really don't have one. Should I be encouraging blogging from home or should I keep it strictly to something we do together in school? What should my students be blogging about? We talked about the importance of rereading and proofreading before submitting posts and comments but some of my students don't know when to use capitalization and don't see anything wrong with their run-on sentences and grammar mistakes. How do I address this?



Abby - this is awesome! I think it's great that you took this head on and as a 4th grade teacher myself, I'm not surprised that your kids were beyond excited to get it going. I think it's okay not to have a plan (I'm a planner myself!). I would suggest, in answer to some of your questions, to maybe have a "focus" of the week for blogging each week. Make this something you've noticed them doing or not doing that you'd like to address. You won't be able to solve all problems at once, but then you can at least narrow your feedback to whatever it is you're "focusing" on for the week. This might make all of those issues seem more manageable, and you can decide what's really important to you. Good luck! Let me know your blog site if you'd like some comments from my students, I know they'd love to read!
ReplyDeletekidblog.org/missmontambaultsclass/
DeleteThe kids would be psyched! They can comment as guests if they don't have kidblog accounts!
Abby- I noticed that Crystal is having her students do a lot of creative writing, and I also saw some persuasive writing pieces.... I think you should just keep doing what you are doing!
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