Monday, November 1, 2010

Blogging and Comics are One in the Same.

As I was reading "Blogging and New Literacies," the second chapter of Diane Penrod's Using Blogs to Enhance Literacy, my eyes were opened to the limitless options of incorporating blogs into the classroom. I have always been a proponent of incorporating technology into the classroom, but have never thought about exposing students and families to blogs. I have always thought of blogs as online diaries, some with different purposes than others. For example, a close friend of mine has a blog where she unloads her happy moments, gripes, shopping finds, experiences and more. Another friend uses a blog as a method of sharing his political opinions and news. I have even done a blog before in another class, but have never thought of incorporating blogs into the elementary classroom.

On page 20, Penrod says, "It is certainly true that literate bloggers have to have strong storytelling skills, excellent syntactic and organizational abilities in presenting information, and a vigorous writing style to convey the content. However, highly literate bloggers also develop an aesthetic sense of arranging the content in visually attractive, easily understood (or "chunked") units. Highly literate bloggers recognize that this new medium demands writing in terms of design, not just expression." I translated this to how I've been teaching writing in my fifth grade placement. I've been using Ralph Fletcher's book, A Writer's Notebook. I read a chapter, or portion of a chapter, as a read aloud each day. We then discuss how what Fletcher says can be incorporated into writing. My goal is to make writing fun and enjoyable for the students, and so far they love it! It is a proud moment as an intern to hear nineteen fifth graders moan because we are not having writing today.

One of Fletcher's main points in the book is that writing can take many forms. It is not just a five paragraph essay or narrative about a prompt that the teacher writes on the chalkboard. It can be a list, a poem, a sentence, or just a word. Many of my students have taken a liking to writing comics. Each week I challenge them to include more words and more descriptive language into their comics, but the comics give them the opportunity to present their ideas and creativity in an aesthetically pleasing way. Blogs are also a way to express ideas and blogging is an interesting way of writing. This article inspired me to introduce blogging to my students and allow this to be an option during writing time. It is an excellent example of how writing is more than the hamburger format paragraph with a clear introduction, three supporting details, and conclusion. Writing is FUN!

2 comments:

  1. Lane...I agree with you. Writing is fun! I wish I could observe you in the classroom implementing your writing program. It sounds like it has been a huge success! I wish I could have the same success getting my 3rd graders motivated to write that you are enjoying in the 5th grade.
    I've never really had any experience blogging before, but I think the importance of style (sometimes even more important than content)makes blogging really fun. Plus, like you said, there are so many different ways to use blogs. That means there are that many more opportunities to tie blogging into real-life context....maybe I will be able to get my 3rd graders motivated afterall.
    -John

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  2. Lane...I agree with you and Penrod that posting blog entries ups the ante for bloggers. It requires people be literate in several ways. Not only do they need to be excellent story tellers but also excellent organizers, excellent presenters, and use their imagination.

    I find that students who blog take extra care in presenting their information they no more people with be examining their writing.

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