190 likes | 350 Views
A Defense for Innovation. Blogging in the Adult Education Classroom. Introduction. Points of Discussion. Need for technology What is Blogging? Innovation Diffusion Benefits-Students. Benefits-Instructors Implementation. A Need for Technology in the Classroom.
E N D
A Defense for Innovation Blogging in the Adult Education Classroom
Points of Discussion • Need for technology • What is Blogging? • Innovation Diffusion • Benefits-Students. • Benefits-Instructors • Implementation
A Need for Technology in the Classroom Learners need to experience technology Awareness is not enough Real world experience Hands-on learning Blogging Technology is redefining education
What is Blogging? • Communication • Technical/Creative • Popular • Wong, & Hew (2010) • “Knowledge Log”
Development of Blogging Everett Rogers (2003) • Need- To open broader forms of communication • Intended Market • General Public • Students • Instructors • Potential Roadblocks • Availability • Resources • User Confidence
Commercialization • The idea materializes into product • Key transactions that commercialized blogging • Pyra develops Blogger then Google purchases site • Google allows the selling of ads to blogs • MySpace Launches • WebLog Inc. is purchased by AOL • Larger corporations back blogging financially
Innovation Diffusion • Knowledge • Persuasion • Decision • Implementation • Confirmation
A Timeline of Blogging Adoption Rate of Adoption Adoption Decision process Innovation Timeline 1994- First Weblogs: Links.Net , Open Diary 1997- Jorn Barger presents term Weblog 1998-Open Diary is used to publish journals 1999-Weblog becomes Blog (Peter Merholz) 1999- Pitas (weblog tool) and Blogger are launched 2002-Technorati-blog search engine launched 2003- Google buys Blogger, My Space is Launched 2007-technorati reports 112 million blogs in use
Attributes of Blogging • Compatibility • Observability
Early Adopters and Laggards • Innovators • Claudio Pinhanez • Brian Lucas • Jorn Barger • Peter Merholz • Justin Hall • Early Adopters • Pitas • Pyra • Gizmodo • Google • Laggards in Blogging Adoption • The Field of Education • Resistant • Why? • Solution
Through this model of decentralized diffusion (Rogers,2003), blogging can be easily adopted. Implementation Instructors are the change agents Experimentation Peer Support
We have reached Critical Mass Time to Adopt • Critical mass is reached when 10-20% of individuals in a system adopt an innovation (Rogers,2003). • Adoption cannot be stopped • Time to get on board 10-20% Adoption (Rogers, 2003. p. 344.)
Encourage and Support The Champion Role Failure to Adopt Need for Technology In the classroom Blogging can Meet that need
Advantages of Blogging Teachers • Easy • Flexible • Enhance Learning • Free • Content Friendly • Accessible • Engaging Students • Easy • Creative • Accessible • Tech Skills • Community • Interactive • Beyond the Classroom Now is the time… …to enter the age of technology
Links for more information about Blogging Article from McGraw Hill • http://www.glencoe.com/sec/teachingtoday/educationupclose.phtml/47 Instructions on how to set up a class blog • http://www.teachersfirst.com/content/blog/blogideas1.cfm Site with more resources and links on blogging creation and use in the classroom • http://digitallyspeaking.pbworks.com/w/page/17791566/Blogging Free blog creation site geared for students and teachers • http://edublogs.org/ Example of a blog I created • http://michaelkirsch.blogspot.com/ Google owned blog site • http://blogger.com Timeline links • http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=17421022 • http://nymag.com/news/media/15971/
References • Anderson, T. (2008).Towards a theory of online learning. In The theory and practice of online learning. Anderson, T. (Ed). Edmonton, AB: AU Press. • Deed, C., & Edwards, A., (2010). Using social networks in learning and teaching higher education: An Australian case study. International Journal of Knowledge Society Research. (1)(2). Retrieved on November 18th 2010 from IGI Global at http://www.igi-global.com.ezp.waldenulibrary.org/Gateway/EData. • Palloff, R., & Pratt, K. (2005). Collaborating online: Learning together in community. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass • Rogers, E., (2003). Diffusion of innovations. New York, NY: Free Press. • Utecht, J. (2007, April). Blogs Aren't the Enemy. Technology & Learning. pp. 32-34. Retrieved from EBSCOhost. on December 12th, 2010. • Utecht, J. (2007). Creators in the Classroom. Web 2.0: New Tools, New Schools, 184. Retrieved from EBSCOhost. on December 14th 2010. • Wong, R., & Hew, K. (2010). The impact of blogging and scaffolding on primary school pupils’ narrative writing: A case study. International Journal of Web-based learning and Teaching Technologies. (5)(2). Retrieved from IGI Global at http://www.igi-global.comezp.waldenulibrary.org/Gateway/EDatabaseTools/DatabaseSearch/SearchResults.aspx.