Barbie's Weblog

Tuesday Nov 14, 2006

Using Blogs and Wikis to Encourage Collaboration and Foster Critical Thinking Skills

            Weblogs and wikis are tools of the Read/Write web that both students and teachers can use to publish what they are learning in the classroom, to collaborate with other students and/or classes, and to engage in student-centered learning.  Blogs enable students to create a web site that allows online conversations around a given topic without learning HTML coding.  They generally allow individuals reading the blog to post their comments or reactions to the site.  Wikis are more open than blogs and encourage collaboration because they are web sites that anyone can edit at any time.  However, teachers can if desired password-protect wiki sites so that only certain individuals can access them for editing purposes.  These new tools enable students to share their writing or learning experiences with not just the teacher but with authentic worldwide audiences.  Therefore, students are more motivated and want to produce the best quality work possible.

            In the article, ?The Educator?s Guide to the Read/Write Web,? the author, Will Richardson, mentions several key strategies being used at the high school where he teaches to use these tools in the classroom.  At his own school, students have used blogs to communicate with students from Poland when learning about the Holocaust, to collaborate with the authors of novels they are reading, and to contact mentors in journalism classes.  These strategies use blogs for more than what most students are accustomed to, which is as a personal journal.  These strategies require them to use their critical thinking, reading and writing skills.  Therefore, when using blogs with my own students I want to try to use them in new and creative ways that encourage higher-level thinking and take full advantage of the possibilities available with this resource.  I also hope to brainstorm possible uses of blogs and wikis with co-workers and students so that we can use these tools in a variety of ways that are interesting to the students, while being applicable to what they are learning.  The author also mentions that these tools can be used for collaboration between students either within the classroom or between classes located around the world.  Therefore, I would like to use these tools to assist my students in interacting and collaborating with students from francophone countries to learn about cultural differences and similarities and francophone diversity in general. 

            In my classroom, I can envision the use of these tools to accomplish a variety of my French goals and objectives.  In all levels of French, I have students write journals using structures and vocabulary that they have learned on a regular basis.  Instead of having my students turn in journals to me, I could have them use blogs instead.  Students would be required to blog about a certain topic and then post it for the rest of their classmates to read.  Each student would then be required to post a comment or to react to a certain number of blogs written by their classmates.  As a result, students would be interacting with one another using the French language rather than just writing something for the teacher to read.  We could also take this strategy one step further by having students from my classroom blog about life in their own town and country in French for another classroom in a francophone country to read.  They could also include scanned photos to further illustrate life in their town and country.  The students from abroad could then respond in either French or English to the students blogs and then share information from their own countries. 

            Wikis would be a wonderful tool that would enable students to collaborate and write stories as a class.  Each student would be assigned a certain number of lines to contribute within a certain window of time.  Each student would have to practice their reading skills, because they would have to read and comprehend what the previous students wrote, their editing skills because they would be required to edit the work of the previous entry, and their writing skills because they would have to write a new entry.  As a teacher, I would be able to look at the history of the story and see how students edited the work of their peers so I could hold them accountable for completing this step.  In the end, we would have a story that we have published as a class for other French speakers to read.  Furthermore, I could possibly contact students learning French at the elementary level and collaborate with a teacher for their students to read the story and possibly draw pictures to illustrate their understanding to be sent back to my students or to be scanned in and included online with the storybook.  As a result, my students would be sharing their knowledge and teaching others, which would make this project more motivating and exciting for them.  

             

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