I still marvel at how well I could keep up. I would be writing on my xanga about the days events, gossip and newest crushes, while simultaneously chatting on aim with at least a dozen different people. How I could keep track of all the screen names and conversations, I'll never know. That was my life though, missing out on one of these gossip sessions could seriously damage your social life, you were out of the loop and would spend the next day reading everyone's blogs trying to catch up.
The evolution of social networking eventually silenced our frantic typing on xanga, and moved us to myspace and then finally to facebook (back in the days where you had to have a college email to have one). But, blogging has always been a backdrop for all of the sites, there are many facebook groups that link back to blogging communities. When someone goes overseas they instantly post a link on their facebook guiding readers to their blogger or wordpress, encouraging others to comment or read their adventures there. The blog is still sacred, even though facebook fully has the capacity to be a blog with it's Notes, people still gravitate toward creating a new site for their writing. It feels more private, less cluttered and a bit more safe. Which is exactly what the E-school News article said, "MacKenty also praised what he called the “purity” of blogs as a communication tool, saying, “It’s not about…who you are, or the color of your skin–it’s about what you have to say. There’s something utterly beautiful and noble about that.'"
As someone who has created multiple blogs for personal use as well as for use in my reflection through teaching, I instantly can see their value. I think that the "The Use of Blogs, Wikis and RSS in Education: A Conversation of Possibilities" article really summed up well how blogs can be used in an educational setting. My emphasis in elementary education is in English/Language Arts and I actually started college as a journalism major, with a fire for writing that, wasn't quite satisfied by re-wording police reports. There is a serious lack of emphasis on writing in schools, in both of my practicum settings (one in West Des Moines and the other in Perry) the students spent little time writing, if any at all. I asked my cooperating teacher in Perry about it and she simply dismissed it as, "something that they'll do later, we don't have time for it now."
Needless to say, that statement made me a little upset. These kids will soon be junior high and high school students, and expected to write papers. If they have never put pencil to paper (or fingers to keys) how can we expect them to be excellent writers overnight? It's unfair to them. I really hope that in my student teaching I can use blogs in some way, I get excited when I think about how students can use them to post writings or journal or peer review work. Using computers is incredibly exciting to them and being able to network through these blogs with other schools make the possibilities endless.
I think that educator's can jump on the bandwagon as well, reading other teacher's experiences through this online medium can really help teachers bounce new ideas off of one another or adapt lessons to be used in their own classrooms. Wikis can also be used to create smaller communities in classrooms, schools and link with students across the country. It's a technology that's as limitless as the human mind.
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