EVO08

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In the past few days I have been reading blogs and making comments. Patricia‘s comment on my last blog post made me think a bit more about the effectiveness of using technology with the students. In her comment she wrote that the “students do not know what to blog about if there is no purpose to it; in other words, if blogging is not incorporated as part of a meaningful activity”. In order to do this she incorporates blogging in content-based projects making it appear as a natural activity among all other activities that lead to the final result of the research carried out by the students. This makes sense and took me to her blog where she wrote in detail about the integration of technology in the classroom. After reading her post and another one she wrote explaining in detail how she structures her research projects, I found myself thinking about a few things. All learning should be meaningful, whether technology is being used or not. If you asked the students to write a composition about a topic of your choice without giving them any further input and/or guidance, they most probably wouldn’t know what to write about. The same happens with technology. If the students don’t see the purpose of using it, then it’s most likely that they won’t. It’s not the technology by itself that motivates the students but the purpose of the activities they need to do.

I guess my students don’t blog more often because they don’t see the purpose for doing it. Although I have tried to explain that blogging would be a good writing practice in the target language and at the same time it could be used as their personal portfolio (having a portfolio with entries about vocabulary and self-study is compulsory), this is apparently not motivating enough for them to use their blogs more often. I think I understand it because this kind of blogging is more an extension of the work done in class, i.e. a kind of homework.

Yet, blogging can easily bring additional motivation and becoming more meaningful by simply have someone commenting on what the students have written. A German native speaker and teacher who lives in Germany made comments on most of the students blogs and suddenly some of them were answering her in the target language even without showing me the text for correction before. I was surprised by the extensive answers Joana wrote to the teacher. She has started learning German in October last year and yet felt motivated enough to write such big texts in a language she still knows so little about. And why? Because there was a good reason to write. Someone made questions and she felt the urge to answer them. Of course she made many mistakes but I am sure the teacher could understand everything and the communication happened.

This is a perfect example of the advantage that these kind of tools can represent in language learning. Social media is about communication, about sharing and interacting with other people, so it can be the perfect tool to develop reading, writing and speaking skills.

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As I have already written about it on this blog, the students’ reactions to the idea of using blogs were different from what I expected. Generally speaking, the older students didn’t like the idea whereas the younger ones (beginners in learning German), although being not very excited by the idea, accepted it and started using their blogs. It was the first time a teacher was using blogs with his students at my school. So it came as something strange and difficult to accept. The first reaction to it by everyone (students, colleagues and parents) was one of strangeness, something they didn’t know exactly what it was and how it could be used with benefits to the students. On the first meeting with all the class teachers and one parent that was representing the other parents, I needed to explain the intention and the potential of using blogs in language teaching. The parent understood my points of view and so did the teachers.

At this point, the majority of the younger students are using their blogs to post, though not to make comments yet. According to my experience, many students are not used to blogging (some didn’t even know what it was) and have little digital knowledge. Very different from what we imagine about a “digital native.”

It seems that we need to tell the students what they should post on the blog. They need to be guided, otherwise they don’t know what to post. I did that with my younger students and a few months later I felt that many of them started enjoying using the blog. The fact that they don’t know the language they are supposed to use (these are German students, at beginners’ level) makes it even more difficult.
At the moment, they are responding to comments of a teacher who made comments on many of their personal blogs. I hope that in the future some of them will use their blogs more spontaneously.
You can have a look at the blogs here: http://klassenblog.bloxio.us/klassen

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This has been a very busy week. I hardly had time to do my assignments for the sessions I am participating in. I just managed to read the dozens of emails that I get everyday. At the moment, work at school is taking much of my time. I hope that I can catch up this weekend.

Today I started using Twitter after reading a post in the SMiELT forum about microblogging. This is a post that I had already read on the Wiki page about microblogging but at that time I hadn’t clicked on the links there. This time, as I came across the same text on the forum, I clicked on the links and saw the video about Twitter which showed me how and why I should use it. Twitter can be funny since it’s a different way to keep you in touch with people either you already know from other places on the Web or to make new contacts. The fact that you need just a few words to say what you are doing makes it easy to use and not time consuming. Snitter is a nifty application that makes the use of Twitter even easier. Without Snitter Twitter wouldn’t be as easy to use as it is. Being able to get the messages on your mobile phone makes it even more interesting. Now I still need to find out how it can be used in connection with my blog.

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Social Media


Fortunately I was already familiar with almost all the platforms and applications we were asked to open accounts at and I had also opened accounts in all of them. The only one I didn’t know was “Jaiku”. So I was spared a lot of time opening accounts.

Yet, the fact that I already have an account at all those platforms doesn’t mean that I use them all regularly. The platforms I’m most familiar with are Wordpress, Flickr, Voice Thread and dotSUB. I don’t know why I don’t use the trio 43. Maybe because it’s not very user friendly and I didn’t see why it was interesting, besides connecting people through their specific interests.

Connecting people, sharing and learning seems to be what these platforms have all in common. None of these platforms requires programming skills to publish content on the Web. This was maybe one of the reason why these tools became so popular and are called web 2.0 tools or social media. Another thing that these platforms have in common is giving every single individual, regardless their technological skills, the chance to express their ideas and interact with the outside world.

The possibility to interact with the outside world makes these kind of platforms different from LMS platforms which are closed environments, only accessible to the people that are allowed to enter them. It’s this feature that makes them so different from platforms like, for example, blogs or wikis.

Social software and media entangle the potential to connect people with similar interests, allowing them to share knowledge and grow together. I have been using tools like blogs, wikis, social bookmarking, aggregators and social networks to communicate with people all over the world.

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