Archive for the 'edublogtalk' 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.

Replying to Comment Challengers

Dear Colin, Inês, Sue and Kevin,
Here’s my reply to you all about the Comment Challenge. Thanks for inspiring me to go even further now!

The Comment Challenge is Just Beginning

We all wish we had more time to explore, comment, post. Not perfect worlds, but this month was filled of ideas on how we can keep the flow of conversations into a deeper, more meaningful level in our blogs. My participation was imperfect, but this doesn’t mean I haven’t gone far. The comment challenge girls, Sue Waters, Kim Cofino, Michele Martin, and Silvia Tosano were just everywhere showing by skillful commenting strategies how to keep distributed conversations aggregated in clusters of meaning. Participants had a variety of levels of engagement, but each learned what he/she needed to apprehend at the time of the challenge.
For me, the challenge was just the spark for further explorations. No, it’s not over! Finding ways and time to connect is a multi-faceted process. You go far, there’s even more to discover. Ideally, it’s time now for us to keep using the skills, strategies, ideas we’ve been exploring in the blogosphere. However, I feel we should go on exploring possibilities as a group as we’ve done so far. I don’t know how, but maybe still using the tag and the cocomment sharing system to highlight new blogs, interesting posts, comments worth reading? Well, I’m speaking up my mind…
My top 5 lessons from this wonderful commenting experience?
  • Connections keep coming in different ways
  • A simple idea can take a bunch of very busy educators to go beyond, always beyond
  • Keep commenting. New nodes of learning are formed by the connections generated in the comment area.
  • There are people interested in what you have to say. Keep blogging.
  • I’m thinking of a totally new approach to next year’s blogging4educators Electronic Village workshop due to the input I’ve gotten from the challenge.
I’d like to thank everybody who enriched my professional development, my days, my life with such meaningful comment connections!
The challenge has just begun.

Five Comments in 30

Yesterday I tried hard to follow the Comment Challenge guidelines and write 5 comments in 5 minutes as suggested by Toni Tallent.
It certainly gave me the dimension of how long we spend to comment! I tried to keep my comments shorter than usual, though I also didn’t want to leave something totally shallow like “great post”, or “excellent idea”…It doesn’t add much to the blogger’s idea. I have the principle of commenting only if I have something to add to the blogger’s post.
I tried hard, but then realized the issues involved in commenting:
  • On most of the blogs, there are different commenting patterns. Some are moderated, some are not, some have verification word, some don’t.
  • Bandwidth is an issue. How long does the page take to load? Is it too heavy on videos?
  • Technical glitches mainly when you post a comment and I don’t know why it’s not submitted…
  • The kind of reasoning you’re going through to react to a blog post may lead you to take much longer you intended to.
  • The size of a blog post matters! Keyboarding skills, as well.
Though I failed as for me the challenge became 5 comments in 30 minutes, I could see something interesting happening:
  • If I became more straightforward in my comments, I could reply to more blogs.
  • It led me to comment on blogs that I don’t comment and just love the people writing there, like in Julie Lindsay’s e-Learning blog
  • It’s interesting to just sit, write and speak up your mind.
  • I’m terrible managing my time!
My strategy for this challenge was just to go to our cocoment page and choose the blogs that appealed to me in terms of blog title or post title, which shows the importance of both! I love to read “Quest for Excellence” anecdote. When I commented on”blogger in Middle Earth” I said I didn’t have a strategy as Ken had set up for himself, but, in fact, thinking back I did as I just mentioned above. It also shows how diverse our styles are. Ken planned everything ahead, I just started doing it!
Ken pointed out to commenting on Michele’s blog. I had the same problem and lost a lot of time there because my comment just wouldn’t go through, I rewrote the comment, and I guess she never got it… Without even knowing, Michele might be losing some of her readers due to technical glitches with her blog host(?).
It’s missing one blog here! Easy to retrieve it through tracking “my conversations” in my cocoment space. So, the last blog I visited for the challenge was Kevin’s Meandering Mind with his inspiring post about his online tutoring experience.
Maybe 5 in 5 is not for me, but definitely was an eye opener!

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:

Connections Brazil x Trento



I had this lovely feedback from Seth, whom I’ve been following for a while. He always has great ideas for the classroom and shares his technical expertise with the Webhead group.

In my online listening class I gave the option for students to choose the listening practice of their preference in our delicious bookmarks. Seth’s audio about Trento was one of the options.

One of my students commented on it and asked some extra questions about Trento. Well, I decided to contact Seth to see if he could reply to her. I got his immediate feedback and here’s the wonderful information about Trento he recorded to Luciene.

Here’s Seth’s post and audio reply to Luciene.

Who said that e-learning isn’t personal, meaningful, contextualized, communicative, networked?

Thanks, Seth, for being such a generous Webhead! I’m sure not only Luciene will be thrilled for such a feedback, but also the whole group will profit from it.

Blogging with Kids Threatened

minilegendsJust when I had a post of the online possibilities for kids and how transformative the read/write Web can be for the little ones in terms of educational benefits for the 21st century and was excited about the new blog coach experience with Graham Wegner, I hear about the alarming news of Al Upton’s blog order of closure by the Department of Education and Children’s Services – South Australia, DECS. They alleged that there was “too much student identifying information”. From the little I’ve seen from Al’s work, mainly through his minilegends voicethread, I could notice how serious of a job he was doing with those kids, enhancing their digital skills so important in this new online order/disorder.
Kids need guidance. At home, they generally don’t get it from parents who sometimes are clueless about the richness of the Web, as well as of its true dangers. So, who better than an educator who’s passionate, engaged in the online community of educators, concerned about developing his kids’ skills for the present “real world” to help the little ones understand the subtleties of the Web? Blogging, voicethreading, this is all part of a reality that cannot be ignored. So, Al was there exploring his students’ voices, passions, drives in the teaching/learning process in a way that was meaningful to them. They were learning from each other and from international partners, blogging coaches. Probably these students would never have had the chance to learn so much about cultural issues, other peoples, and even develop their media literacy skills, ICT and information skills if they hadn’t been exploring together, in class, the wonders of Web 2.0 tools that might impact their lives in terms of advancement of their critical thinking skills, creativity, self-expression.
As for personal information, do administrators and parents have any idea of what their kids are saying or doing outside the classroom, in their online personal context? At least in Brazil, many 3rd graders already have their MSN account, Orkut, MySpace, etc, which let them be overexposed. They share photos, personal information, etc. So, isn’t it better if we let them figure out through guidance the limits by which they can be safely surfing the Web? Isn’t there too much media advertisement about the dangers of predators, pedophiles on the Net that is generating this paranoid view of its true dangers? If it were for the dangers of the real world, then should I just shut my kids in the house and no contact with the outside world out of our parent protective bubble? No! We can’t let fear and this collective safety paranoia hinder us from having healthy relationships, educational exchanges that are positive, enriching and might impact on our kids future.
What Al’s experience has shown us is that even in a country who has been evolving so rapidly in e-learning, online pedagogy, educators’ good intentions are still misinterpreted by administrators who probably haven’t even had the chance to be part of online networked social spaces, or parents who don’t understand the pedagogy behind blogging and, in most cases, don’t even grasp the concept of blogging. So, time to invest even more time and energy in establishing the links with these groups in straighter bonds so that they see what’s behind the kids’ online exchanges and perceive the educational blogging potential. Time to change. One way to start could be by reading with care Lorna’s blog “Parents as Partners” to get inspired to catalyze the shifts throughout society, and not only for the kids. Blogging will, then, be back to its honorable place in the educational context. We can’t let it be threatened by the ones who don’t know about it. We, as educators, need to show them the light so that they can see what lies ahead.

Not new, but an idea for Edublogpractice

I’m always eager to share and learn with the groups I’m part of.
So, here’s the challenge: how about adding our voices (audio or text) to this voicethread on edublogpractices that can engage students in blogging. It can be just ideas that haven’t be tested in your classroom yet, or practices that you found worked in your blogging classes.
I started with a very simple one. Listen to it and add yours!

Still on Edublogtalk

Here’s some advice:
  • Be aware of the world around you
  • Scan, collect, organize the information you see, perceive and receive
  • Look for patterns
  • Understand values
  • Have a view, but don’t make it an ideology
  • Keep your eyes open

  • Do you think this piece of advice could apply to your classroom? Certainly. In fact, they have to do what we’ve been exploring in this edublogtalk. As we’ve been discussing, blogging is an eye opener, an exploration of our peripheral views of what surrounds us. Through blogging, we can tap our external world to our inner voices. And that’s exactly the point of Scott Smith’s presentation in lift08. No, he was not talking specifically to educators, but surely to teacherpreneurs, those who are ready for change, subverting old-fashioned practices and trying to see the future the already involves us. Scott was talking about foresight, perceiving the future. He asks what motivates people, what the trends are, what the driving forces are to give us a picture of what surrounds us. Then, he explores the need for a human-based insight, to get on the street and “see” what is out there. Blending external factors to internal is key to understanding the directions we’re taking. Isn’t that what we should question and look for as educators?
    What are our students’ driving forces? What touches them? What motivates them? What switches on their creativity, their passion? What are we doing to encourage that?

    There’s still a lot to explore from Scott’s talk, but my message here is to look around and find the future around us and explore it with our learners to the benefit of each individual that we encounter and touch. What a better way than to start by blogging and encouraging students to see, reflect, express themselves, and engage in discussions?


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