Classroom Teacher

6 Reasons To Get Your Students Blogging

Updated June 24, 2019: Crazy. I wrote this post 11 years ago. This was before I was using Dragon, speaking naturally into a microphone and getting the voice-to-text software to “type” for me.

Since that time, I’ve run a classroom blog every year – sometimes having my students blog more or less, depending on how many devices we could get for our class.

Back in 2011, I wrote this post about the merits of blogging in the classroom.

And, I still stand by these ideas – blogging can provide an authentic way to reach a wider audience through the internet.

But, after a decade of classroom websites and student blogs, I’ve come to the realization that the biggest barrier is access to technology in the classroom.

Over the years, I’ve been fortunate to try multiple approaches:

In Ontario, the provincial government is trying to ban phones in the classroom, but the reality is that kind of approach is incredibly hard to enforce.

The reality is that phones can be

So I wonder how a ban on student phones will impact the BYOD model where student technology has to supplement limited classroom tech resources?

Are student blogs still relevant?

I think so – I think blogs and websites have their place in media literacy.

But, I think we also need to explore social media as another media to engage with the outside world.

Arguably, many of the points below about blogging also apply to social media, which is a form of micro-blogging.

Here’s the original post from June 2011:

More and more teachers are blogging in the classroom. And, why not!

There are a lot of reasons to consider blogging in the classroom.

  1. It gives your students an authentic purpose to write. The idea that their stories will be published online for the world to see may motivate them to do their best.
  2. Students have a real goal in sight when using the writing process. Not everything needs to be revised, edited, and published, but because this work will be on public display, there’s greater incentive to polish the work.
  3. It allows your students to share their work with family members around the world. (And if the student work is translated into their first language, it allows dear old grandma who lives overseas and doesn’t speak English the opportunity to celebrate in your students’ success.)
  4. It provides a way to create and explore media texts as a natural extension of the writing process. Instead of just publishing your good copies on your school bulletin board, why not publish your good copies online. Your students may even get feedback and comments from people in cyberspace. (You can even set up your class blog so that it shows where in the world your comments are coming from.)
  5. It introduces your students to a new genre and form. Blog posts typically use short sentences and short paragraphs to pre-digest the content in this channel-changing world.
  6. It may inspire some of your student to blog themselves and encourage them to see themselves as writers.

There are, of course, security, privacy, and copyright issues to consider, but done correctly, blogging in the classroom can provide a modern way to engage your students.

Do you get your students blogging or using social media as a classroom project? How’s that working for you?

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