Archive for the 'begin2blog' Category

Edublogging with Passion

A friend of mine in Italy, Seth Dickens, has kindly asked me to talk a bit about edublogging. We had planned for an interview, but due to technical issues, we went for a recording.
Edublogging… How many times have I written about it, gave tips, presented, and tried to inspire others? Fact is the ones who endure the first stages of discoveries and experiments are the passionate educators, those who teach with heart and soul, who truly believe in their transformative potential as an educator. These are the ones who, later on, become passionate edubloggers.
The point of my talk was what I’ve been saying from the beginning and what I wrote about in the article “Blogging in the Classroom: It Doesn’t ‘Simply Happen‘ “. Persistence, fearlessness, being passionate and knowing that you have something that will add value to someone are key to make it a successful endeavor.
We make lists of how to be a successful blogger, but formulas are not in the core of Edublogging, conversations are. Conversations don’t mean that you need to get tons of comments. They mean a talk to yourself, commenting on other people’s blogs, and yes, getting comments when your readers feel the urge to interact with you. I sin as a blogger, for I am not consistent as I should be or as would be willing to. However, I’ve decided to let it go, for I have little ones and a husband to care for. I have professional projects and other ways to connect. Nowadays, Twitter is my means of quickly connecting to others, though it’s not a substitute to blogging. Twitter is connection, blogging is reflection + connection. One complementing each other in my circle of learning.

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Through blogging, edublogging my mind pours out, I learn, share, re-shape who I am and how I see things. But, my ultimate question is how could I show that to other educators? Maybe I can’t. Just through their own blogging journey they will learn what passionate blogging is all about, some will just find the excuse for not even giving a try. Blogging is a transformational act one should be willing to undergo. It won’t work if it’s just mechanic, technical. No. It’s humanistic, contextualized, personalized, collective, cultural, intense.
I’ll never forget some memorable posts that show the power of blogging:
Marina’s post - A psychologist talking about her experience about being a clown.
Having Dennis Newson as our class mystery guest
Motivating my adult students to predict a short story by Edgar Allan Poe we read in parts in class.
The rich cultural exchanges my group had with Dennis Oliver’s group in the US due to our International Exchange blog.
Emerson, a quiet adult student in class, surfacing as a wonderful blogger and commenter.
Discussion with Russian students and readers about the Brazilian movie “The City of God”.
Sharing Love Stories
Wow! Just so nice to travel back in the past through blogging. It’s a record of a moment, a state of mind, it shows us and our learners in ways we’d never share in the old brick and mortar classroom in such intense exchange and connection. These are just some of the examples mainly with students in it, but there is the other side of edublogging as a professional and personal development. This is another story and certainly deserves another blog post!

Posterous as a Travel Log

Just came back from Martha’s Vineyard and was pleasantly surprised by the effectiveness of using a mobile, taking photos and posting them straight to Posterous. It was simply incredible, mobile, capturing the exact moment and thought. I could post as I had fun. I didn’t postpone it from when I got back from the trip or didn’t have to write anything to remember. Just flashes from my mind and camera.
Here are the posts that make my first travel log in Posterous. Promising. I can think of many possibilities for a conference, the classroom and personal endeavors.

Travel Log

In Cape Cod
On a Bike Bus Heading to the Ferry
On the Ferry At Oak Bluffs Vineyard Haven At South Beach – Martha’s Vineyard Gingerbread Houses Leaving Martha’s Vineyard
Of course, Posterous lacks tags. I wonder if it is tracked in Technorati, for example. I’ll investigate that. Even so, it has RSS feeds and it’s a simple way to engage educators who have no clue where to get started and need something simple, efficient, and fast to be encouraged to take blogging seriously.

Posterous – Blogging Made Simple

I just tested Posterous. I heard about it from Ana Maria Menezes, but haven’t tried it before. Today, after Bee’s comment on the post about Google Docs and live blogging, I thought I’d test Posterous to see if it could be another option for educators attending a conference who have never blogged before. There are tons of options out there.
What I liked about posterous is that to start blogging, I didn’t have to set up anything. I just wrote a very simple post in my email, attached a photo, sent to  post at posterous.com and this is the result:
http://carlaarena.posterous.com/my-first-blog-post-1078
Immediately after I sent the email, I got an email back with my first post and some editing options. I thought it would be a very, very simple way to get started. What do you think?

So, What are YOU Blogging for?

I couldn’t resist this one!
I’ve been an admirer and reader of Chris Sessums for a while. But this post has really touched in what I’ve been trying to share for some time now with educators all over when we have the Electronic Village blogging4educators  sessions.
It’s all about a purpose.
So, how’s my blogging related to my business?
As an educator, my blog reflects who I am, my interests, my passions, my drives, so then it’s an open space for sharing and learning. By blogging and reflecting, I can improve who I am, try to think outside the box, get other’s input, establish new connections. It makes me move forward and it directly influences my teaching and my approaches to learning and teaching. Since I started blogging, I have certainly become an educator who truly believes in the power of collective learning and building of knowledge.
Blogging is transformative and makes me change every day, and I hope it reflects on the new learning opportunities I’m providing my learners with.
Thanks, Chris, for starting this!
I’d love to hear from my friends Cris Costa, Mary Hillis, Gladys Baya, Vance Stevens , Ronaldo Jr., Bee Dieu .
So, guys, how does your blogging relate to your business?
As  Chris suggested, pass this question on to people around you…An interesting, basic question that should guide us in our blogging world.
Here’s a video Chris shared with some fresh perspective of some educators about why they’re blogging and how:

Educating Educators – Part 1



Lately, I've been more interested than ever in possibilities for professional development for teachers wanting to venture in the edtech world. I've been questioning myself how I could help them understand the many paths they can take even with limited time and even more limited budget. Some time ago, I wrote about the fear of getting started, but once the first obstacle is overcome, the online possibilities are just limitless.


I guess I’d start by suggesting those teachers to begin with Maria Thacher’s post on becoming a 21st century educator which was inspired by David Warlick’s informative and straightforward ideas on the topic.


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