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One Teacher’s Journey with Blogs

One Teacher’s Journey with Blogs. Building a Flexible & Dynamic CMT. The Class Takes Over. The Teacher Blogs. The Student Blogs on the Road. Diving through the Layers and into the Learning. Diving through the Layers and into the Learning. Into the ‘Zine. Considering the Excerpt.

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One Teacher’s Journey with Blogs

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  1. One Teacher’s Journey with Blogs Building a Flexible & Dynamic CMT The Class Takes Over The Teacher Blogs The Student Blogs on the Road

  2. Diving through the Layers and into the Learning

  3. Diving through the Layers and into the Learning

  4. Into the ‘Zine Considering the Excerpt And the Full Text Of Writing for the World

  5. When Students Use the Medium They consider structure and complex relationships between media and subject;

  6. And they produce keen critical thinking in inventive forms as they master the technology.

  7. Taking the Blog Outside: Multiple Layers of Learning Layer Three: Synthesizing and Reflecting Layer One: Reacting to Another View Layer Two: Initiating Dialogue I just want to point out that the Blogger's Field Trip was only very loosely defined at the outset, with no clear purpose. Usually, loosely defined assignments only involve the student and professor, but with this Blogger's Field Trip, we have the opportunity to benefit as a class from each students unique interpretation, stretching the limits of the assignment even beyond the original concept. However, we also have the opportunity for our very different interpretations to clash and create conflicts, as well as move too far beyond the original concept.

  8. Layer 4: Ongoing, Deepening Discussion RESULTS • Education in Context • Knowledge Tree • Emergence • Efficacy

  9. Extending the Teaching Moment Online, Connected Post & Response Benefits the Writer and the Reader The Teacher • Highlights Noteworthy Accomplishments • Models Critical Reading & Response Writing • Helps the Writer to Revise

  10. Real World-Classroom Connections

  11. I mean, I’ve always thought that she was an excellent dancer, and I’ve always enjoyed watching her perform, but I don’t know, this year, she just went to a different level. She made The Leap. This was like watching Carly Patterson do her floor routine in the Olympics, and you knew (even knowing nothing of gymnastics) that she was giving the performance of a lifetime, and you knew you were watching something special. And that night, Charzetta was the best dancer out there. She had confidence, attitude, charisma, and such control and certainty of her world that all we could do was just let her take us on this incredible ride, cheering and screaming all the way… Dancing—this is her voice. This is how she reaches us and speaks to us. So for her to stop dancing would like voluntarily getting her vocal cords removed. Maybe I’m wrong. Maybe she will stop dancing at some point. But not before she’s run out things to say. Posted by Eugene at December 5, 2004 06:35 PM Student Responses: I have to tell you Eugene, that your piece of writing was really articulate…Your analogy to Carly Patterson was great and so to the point, it made me regret even more that I wasn't able to be there to see Charzetta communicate with the world. Posted by: Katie at December 5, 2004 07:04 PM It didn’t seem detached the way some reviews or responses to a piece of art do…This raises a question. What about those that have not found his/her own form of expression? Surely, even those that have not developed the skill required to do certain thing still have a voice and an opinion to express… Posted by: Zu at December 5, 2004 09:48 PM OH MY GOSH EUGENE!!! You rock my world!!. In order to appease my family I take internships at Lehman Brothers and Bloomberg News Media so that I have experience in a professional background and land a job after college... I know this may seem corny but I want to thank Class WP200 '04 for making me see my voice and helping me express it. Posted by: Charly at December 6, 2004 01:33 PM And so far as the other half of the conversation goes. I feel at a place like Middlebury if your desires aren't to be a banker or a doctor you’re sometimes made to feel like you are wasting your time. There is a lot more to life than as my buddy Cuba Gooding Jr. would say "Show me the Money" As great as green paper is there are more important things like happiness, or maybe dance, or friends (especially being friends with me) etc. So there is my piece of social commentary and I hope you dance the night way again and again but not too many times a night because just watching that show made me tired and I didn't even shake my arms and other stuff. Posted by: john at December 9, 2004 04:30 PM Students Affecting One Another

  12. What Happens To A Student

  13. Blogging Around the World • Blog as Evolving Narrative • Intersections Between Experience and Expectation • Effects on Readers Raise the Bar • Connections to Other Courses

  14. So, Do Blogs Make Sense? • If faculty want to give students ownership and therefore responsibility for the learning (necessitating teacher’s move out from the center and into the circle of the class); • If faculty value exploration and inquiry taking place within an evolving • course narrative; • If faculty want to move beyond the room and even the campus, • linking to other classes and continuing beyond the semester; • If faculty are prepared for the work involved in using technology • with this intensity.

  15. For More Information Barbara Ganley Lecturer, English and Writing Program Director, The Project for Integrated Expression CTLR Middlebury College Middlebury, VT 05753 Tel: 802 443 2220 Email: ganley@middlebury.edu Héctor Vila Assistant Professor in Writing Middlebury College Middlebury, VT 05753 Tel: 802-443-2181 Email: hvila@middlebury.edu • A Sampling of Héctors’ Blogs • All blogging examples can be found off Héctor’s blog: • http://www.mediainquiry.org • To go directly to the Future Communities Blog: • http://mt.middlebury.edu/middblogs/hvila/FutureCommunities/ A Sampling of Barbara Ganley’s Blogs bgblogging http://mt.middlebury.edu/middblogs/ganley/bgblogging Fall 2004 Arts Writing Blog: http://mt.middlebury.edu/middblogs/ganley/artswriting Spring 2004 Creative Writing Blog: http://wl.middlebury.edu/el170bs04 Fall 2003 First-year Seminar Irish Lit & Film Blog: http://wl.middlebury.edu/irishf03

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