Classroom Teacher

Sending classroom website email newsletters: Google Sites (FeedBurner) versus WordPress

I had the opportunity to sit in on a Google Sites and Google apps for education workshop the other day as we gear up for the start of the new school year. There’s lots to like about a classroom website powered by Google sites:

If you’re looking for simple way to get a classroom website up and running, Google Sites is definitely a strong option. Especially if all you want to do is set up a space online where you can tell students and parents about all the great things that you’re doing.

The one thing I find Google Sites is still lacking is an easy way for parents and students to be notified of when you make changes to your class website. Here’s the problem with sending out email updates from Google Sites, and here’s why I like WordPress for my class websites:

Sending out an email newsletter on Google Sites (using Feedburner)

If you check out the Google apps for education training center, you find out that you can update parents from your website by using the announcement page. (An announcement page is basically a blog within Google Sites. You post updates and the also up chronologically on this announcement page.)

The problem with FeedBurner is that it’s not very reliable. I’ve used it on my teacher websites and classroom blogs and I find that my posts would rarely get emailed out to parents and students on the same day. (I know this because I signed up to my own email subscription to make sure things are working.) Often times, the email would come out the next day, but if you Google around, you read stories about how FeedBurner can be very late. It’s not just me.

Sending out an email newsletter on WordPress

I use WordPress for my classroom websites and professional online stomping grounds.

What does this mean?

  1. Students and parents sign up with their email address on my class website.
  2. WordPress sends out an email so they can confirm the subscription. Once they click the link in the email, they can choose delivery options – they can receive emails the moment I post something, or they can choose to receive daily or weekly digests.
  3. I post important information on my website (about a test, or homework assignment, or secret prize)
  4. As long as students and parents have signed up for immediate delivery, they’ll receive my post in their inbox a few seconds after I publish on my class website.

FeedBurner (the email delivery system for Google Sites) is nice, but it doesn’t compare to WordPress.

This blog post was dictated using Dragon NaturallySpeaking Premium 12 in MS Word 2010.

Click here to find out more about the Dragon NaturallySpeaking Student / Teacher version. Dragon 12 seems to be working much better lately compared to my first impressions.

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