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Teaching With Blogs

July 27, 2010

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“It is my impression that no one really likes the new. We are afraid of it. It is not only as Dostoevsky put it that 'taking a new step, uttering a new word is what people fear most.' Even in slight things the experience of the new is rarely without some stirring of foreboding.”
--Eric Hoffer, Between The Devil And The Dragon

I tried the new in fall 2009, teaching with student blogs, (look in sidebar and scroll down) out in the open where anyone who wanted to could see what the students were producing. The blogging wasn’t new for me. I’d been doing that for almost five years. Having students blog was a different matter. I had no experience in getting them to overcome their anxieties, relaxing in writing online, learning to trust one another that way. Normally I believe what’s good for the goose is good for the gander. If I could blog comfortably and get something from that, so could they. On reflection, however, I was very gentle with myself when I started to blog. As an experiment to prove to myself whether I could do it, for three full weeks I made at least one post a day, 500 to 600 words, a couple of times 1,100 to 1,200 words. I didn’t tell a soul I was doing this. There was no pressure on me to keep it up. It was out in the open, yet nobody seemed to be watching. After those three weeks I felt ready. In the teaching, however, at best I could ask the students to blog once a week. I gave the students weekly prompts on the readings or to follow up on class discussion. (See the class calendar for fall 2009. The prompts are in the Friday afternoon entries.) If I let them blog quietly to get comfortable as I had done, the entire semester would expire before they were ready to go public. There seemed no alternative but to have them plunge in.

The uncertainty about how best to assist the students once they had taken the plunge created an important symmetry between the students and me; we both were to learn about how to do this well, often by first doing it less well. Though it was an inadvertent consequence, of all my teaching over the past 30 years I believe this course came closest to emulating the Seven Principles for Good Practice in Undergraduate Education by Chickering and Gamson. I learned to comment on the student posts, not with some pre-thought-through response based on what I anticipated they’d write, but rather to react to where they appeared to be in their own thinking. (This post provides a typical example. The student introduced time management as a theme. My comment aimed to make her think more about time management.) As natural as that is to do in ordinary conversation, I had never done it before when evaluating student work. Indeed, I didn’t think of these comments as evaluation at all. I thought of them as response. In the normal course of my non-teaching work I respond to colleagues all the time and they respond to me. This form of online interaction in the class made it more like the rest of my interactions at work.

Most of the students were quite awkward in their initial blogging. Good students all, the class was a seminar on "Designing for Effective Change" for the Honors Program, but lacking experience in this sort of approach to instruction, the students wrote to their conception of what I wanted to hear from them. I can’t imagine a more constipated mindset for producing interesting prose. For this class there was a need for them to unlearn much of their approach which had been finely tuned and was quite successful in their other classes. They needed to take more responsibility for their choices. While I gave them a prompt each week on which to write, I also gave them the freedom to choose their own topic so long as they could create a tie to the course themes. Upon reading much of the early writing, I admonished many of them to "please themselves" in the writing. I informed them that they could not possibly please other readers if they didn’t first please themselves. It was a message they were not used to hearing. So it took a while for them to believe it was true. In several instances they tried it out only after being frustrating with the results from their usual approach. This, as Ken Bain teaches us, is how students learn on a fundamental level.

I'm crustier now than I was as a younger faculty member. Nonetheless, I find it difficult to deal with the emotion that underlies giving feedback to students when that feedback is less than entirely complimentary to them. Yet given their awkward early attempts at writing posts that’s exactly what honest response demanded. It’s here where having the postings and the comments out in the open so all can see is so important, before the class has become a community, before the students have made up their minds about what they think about this blogging stuff. Though both the writing and the response are highly subjective, of necessity, it is equally important for the process to be fair. How can a student who receives critical comments judge those comments to be fitting and appropriate, rather than an example of the insensitive instructor picking on the hapless student? Perhaps a very mature student can discern this even-handedly from the comments themselves and a self-critique of the original post. I believe most students benefit by reading the posts of their classmates, making their own judgments about those writings and then seeing the instructor’s comments, finally making a subsequent determination as to whether those comments seem appropriate and helpful for the student in reconsidering the writing.

A positive feedback loop can be created by this process. The commenting, more than any other activity the instructor engages in, demonstrates the instructor’s commitment to the course and to the students. In turn the students, learning to appreciate the value of the comments, start to push themselves in the writing. Their learning is encouraged this way. Further, since the blogging is not a competition between the students and their classmates, those who like getting comments begin to comment on the posts of other students. The elements of the community that the class can become are found in this activity.

Since on a daily basis I use blogs and blog readers in my regular work, one of the original reasons for me taking this approach rather than use the campus learning management system was simply that I thought it would be more convenient for me. Also, given my job as a learning technology administrator, I went into the course with some thought that I might showcase the work afterward. Openness is clearly better for that. However in retrospect neither of these is primary. The main reason to be open is to set a good tone for the class. We want ideas to emerge and not remain concealed.

Yet there remains one troubling element: student privacy. Is open blogging this way consistent with FERPA? As best as I’ve been able to determine, it is as long as students “opt in.” (I did give students the alternatives of writing in the class LMS site or writing in the class wiki site. No student opted for those.) My experience suggests, however, that is not quite sufficient. If most students opt in, peer pressure may drive others to opt in as well. More importantly, however, students choose to opt in when they are largely ignorant of the consequences. Might they feel regret after they better understand what the blogging is all about?

Based on my discussion with the students on this point, essentially all their reservations about blogging would have been eliminated were they to have blogged under aliases. One of my students figured that out on her own, for self-protection. A few others took out any mention of their name on their blogs partway into the class. I’ve been thinking of the next class I will teach and how I’ll adopt aliases in that setting. My current plan is to assign aliases generated by concatenating the names of famous economists (I teach microeconomics) with the course rubric and number. Then in the bio section of their blogs I’ll have the students post a little about the economists who are their namesakes. The actual aliases will be a little long and clunky this way, but in the colloquial way students are apt to communicate with each other, I’m sure they’ll embrace shorter forms. And this way they’ll become acquainted with some of the giants in the field, not a bad byproduct from satisfying their privacy need. I had briefly considered using something considerably shorter, say a number. But that conjured up thoughts of The Prisoner and that’s not the ambiance I’m trying to create for the course.

I wonder if partway into the semester, after having established some confidence with the blogging, students might choose to reveal their true identities. I’m curious to find out.

Lanny Arvan is CIO and associate dean for e-learning at the College of Business of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

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Comments on Teaching With Blogs

  • Blogging
  • Posted by Chalk Face on July 27, 2010 at 10:30am EDT
  • I tried out a blog in my summer graduate course and it worked out really well. You can view it at educationandgender.wordpress.com. Although I am reluctant to try it with undergraduates, I might give it a shot.

  • blogging as a metacognitive journaling activity
  • Posted by alexandra m pickett , associate director at SUNY learning network on July 27, 2010 at 10:45am EDT
  • hi lanny: i was interested to read your post.

    i teach a fully online master's level course "intro to online teaching" and have used blogging as a metacognitive journaling activity in the course for 3 years now. (here is a prezi about my course fyi http://prezi.com/yyzcr9_btox6/teaching-learning-in-the-cloud/)

    Blogging is a required component of the course. they are required to reflect on their learning and to provide me with descriptive feedback on their learning experiences in the course. they are given specific guiding questions or each blogging assignment (1 per week/2 per module) and they must self assess their own posts based on a rubric
    http://etap687.edublogs.org/2008/06/02/reflections-blog-post-grading-rubric/
    They have freedom to blog about whatever they like, but they do have to address in some way the guiding questions in at least one of their posts. They read and respond to each others posts and i comment and give them feedback in blog comments and using diigo highlight and comments. I also grade them based on the rubric. the activity is 20% of their grade.

    I feel very strongly about public blogging. If it is in the course and student access to it is removed at the end of the term then it is NOT a BLOG. The very nature of a blog is that it is yours and public. If we ask students to generate content and then we take away their access to it, how is that student-centered? I want my students to have the experience of developing their public digital voice and to contribute to the living discourse on the social web.

    I use it for 2 reasons:

    1. To get them to make their thinking and learning visible to me. to reflect on their learning, on how they learn and on what they are learning and how they are applying what they are learning and on how what they are learning makes them feel. I want them to apply, defend, refute, assert, support, etc. , what they are thinking, learning, feeling.

    2. To provide descriptive feedback to me on the activities and design of the course so that i can understand their experiences in it better and so that i can improve it and my practice.

    You can browse through my students blogs here http://etap687.edublogs.org/ (I also keep a blog for the course). Current live 2010 student blogs are links on my blog and a selection of blogs from 2009 and 2008 past semesters are also links.

    The quality of their posts and their insights are astounding. The tone and nature of their posts have a different character than their posts in course discussions.

    for example:
    http://joanerickson.edublogs.org/
    http://joyquah.edublogs.org/
    http://francapponi.edublogs.org/

    : ) alex

  • Should we encourage anonymity?
  • Posted by MIS Prof , Mgmt/Mktg at public teaching university on July 27, 2010 at 10:45am EDT
  • I like your approach to teaching writing, which is a challenge these days, and to teaching students to use blogs and to use technology. I understand why, on several levels, you would allow the students to use an alias in your blogging assignment. I am as concerned as any technology expert about privacy (see ... I've used a pseudonym myself!). I'm also aware of the rich tradition of using pseudonyms in writing and publishing and how that can encourage the readers to seriously consider the material without being biased about who did the writing.

    But in a broader scope, I am concerned about anonymity where education and business is involved and about what sorts of examples we are setting for our students. Group decision support systems research shows better quality brainstorming if anonymity is preserved in the idea generating stage of the process. However, plenty of research and experience also shows that many individuals do not maintain the same level of courtesy and use of social norms, ethics, and etiquette when anonymous (although I figure your students behaved themselves in your blogging assignment). There is a natural tension between openness and privacy in an environment with several million participants. See the tension in Second Life between gamers and business/educational participants.

    Should we not teach students to take responsibility for their contributions to the discourse? Is there any meaning to identity integrity? We need some sort of identity integrity in conducting sales transactions to ensure payment and to avoid buyer repudiation of those transactions. In critical thinking, we teach students to consider biases and agendas that writers might have in adopting a particular viewpoint or pushing a particular set of ideas or proposals. However, the privacy of an alias appears to be very useful in encouraging fledgling writers to take the plunge and just write.

    Maybe I'm being hypocritical. Or maybe we need better privacy protections. I'm not sure what the answer is. But I am concerned about what signals we send to students.

    Thanks for a great article that has stimulated me to ponder these issues.

  • you've given me some good ideas
  • Posted by Sloane Thompson , Director of Career Development at IU School of Liberal Arts at IUPUI on July 27, 2010 at 10:45am EDT
  • Thanks very much for sharing your experience and thought process regarding using student blogs in your class. I especially appreciated the suggestions that aliases may aid in protecting student's identity particularly with regard to FERPA. I look forward to trying something like this with some new career courses I am developing, and I also plan to share your article with our Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, our Economics Faculty and a few other faculty who have been experimenting with a variety of technologies to enhance their teaching in both in-person and online courses.

  • Posted by Whitney , Research Development at UC Santa Barbara on July 27, 2010 at 1:15pm EDT
  • I think student blogs are a great idea and I loved reading your thoughts about the whole endeavor. It's given me a lot to think about, as we're half-way through our first foray into undergraduate blogging. We have 20 students from a summer research intern program writing about their research experiences (http://ucsbresearch.wordpress.com) and we've been pleased with their progress so far. At the moment I'm thinking about how we can sustain an undergraduate research blog through the academic year and the issues that might arise in the process.

  • Posted by Kate Clancy , Assistant Professor of Anthropology at University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign on July 27, 2010 at 3:45pm EDT
  • Great piece, Lanny! I appreciate your contribution and your thoughtfulness around teaching with blogging. I think MIS makes a good point that it's not blogging if it's not public, so having students opt to use a pseudonym instead of their real name might be a way to encourage public writing while avoiding FERPA issues.

    The issue I come up with, again and again, is that I teach very large classes (as you know!). So a blog with hundreds of students that I or even a handful of TAs responds to is not feasible. So what I've come up with is using it occasionally in upper level classes, but I also occasionally use it within my lab group. I am working on a piece of science writing right now with two former students that I'll put on my lab blog in a few days. It gives them a chance to work on some ideas, share their thinking, and gives them exposure, while providing some safety as I am editing the piece with them. I hope to do more of this, and for the most part make it more casual, in the coming year.

    http://lee-anthro.blogspot.com

  • Bloggers are diverse; assessment can be tricky.
  • Posted by Dennis G. Jerz , English--New Media Journalism at Seton Hill University on July 27, 2010 at 9:00pm EDT
  • As Arvan points out, bloggers in their natural habitat don't get frequency requirements and minimum word lengths. They don't get prompts, either, so I very rarely assign them.

    I have tried to maintain some semblance of the spontaneous nature of blogging, and an awareness of the many different ways bloggers can blog, by assessing blogs via portfolio.

    Some students are punctual minimalists (dutifully answering a prompt, and then stopping). Others are eccentric geniuses (who will occasionally write long, thoughtful, passionate pieces, but won't write much at all unless they feel inspired).

    Some prefer to blog after class (to post ideas they couldn't formulate on demand in a face-to-face setting), and others draft soliloquies in MS-Word and copy-paste into the blogging form. Still others do their best work in the comments attached their peers' blog entries, or by making lateral connections via hyperlinks.

    While I do occasionally post specific prompts, in general all I ask is that students blog SOMETHING for each assigned reading (usually a brief quote from the reading, and a brief statement of what the student would say about their chosen passage, if called on in class).

    Before class, I skim what students have posted, and thus can start class by saying, "Jimmy and Sally disagree with each other about topic X. Jimmy, tell Sally why you say X, and Sally, tell Jimmy why you say not X." (Even if Jimmy and Sally haven't discovered this disagreement, by reading each other's blogs, it's likely that at least a handful of students will be familiar with what either Jimmy or Sally wrote.) I might, during a lull in a discussion, call on a quiet student and ask, "Whose blog entry did you comment on this week?"

    Two to four times per semester (depending on how important the blogging is to the course design), students submit a self-reflective blogging portfolio, where they highlight blog entries that show various blogosphere virtues such as depth, timeliness, outbound links, interaction with peers, etc.

    The students know about the requirement to produce at least some examples of more-than-the-bare-minimum blogging, and a certain percentage will coast through on a week-to-week basis and catch up right before a portfolio is due. But the action of catching up, and sorting and organizing their portfolios, really helps them to synthesize what they've learned during the previous unit.

    The portfolio assignment page for my "Videogame Culture and Theory" (online, 3-week J-term course) is on the following page. Below you'll see some comments from students asking about the assignment, and links to the student portfolios themselves.

    http://jerz.setonhill.edu/EL250/2010/01/portfolio_1/

    To a certain percentage of students, perhaps even the majority, blogging is just another kind of homework. But a handful in each class will feel it's worth a bit of extra effort, or even a lot of extra effort. Even the reluctant bloggers benefit from reading the interactions sparked by a handful of enthusiastic bloggers.

    And when a student a student wants to make up for missed face-to-face class participation, the blogs mean that there's a critical mass of peer-peer interaction going on, so that it can be meaningful to say, "Make up for your missed class discussion by posting a comment on every student's blog for the discussion you missed, and then write another blog entry summarizing your participation in the discussions that ensued from the comments you posted."

    It's a fairly common experience for student blogs to attract comments from the authors of textbooks the students are blogging about, or even people who are involved in the current events the students mention. I use those incidents to remind students that they aren't simply writing for me, that they have a real audience outside the classroom.

  • Some reactions to the comments
  • Posted by Lanny Arvan , CIO and Assc Dean for eLearning, College of Business at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign on July 28, 2010 at 8:00am EDT
  • On the anonymity-alias thing that Alexandra and MIS Prof commented on, my plan was to assign the aliases so that I would have a map of alias to actual identity. Whether that would entirely deter more aggressive behavior, I don't know. But the students wouldn't be completely anonymous. I should also point out that if students do feel less accountable this way the shy ones might be even more reluctant to give voice to their ideas. These are things to investigate. I don't know how it will play out.. My experience from the fall suggests that blogging is not sufficient and some of the communication must happen in other ways, e.g., face to face or by email, both to draw out the reluctant ones and to get the overly aggressive behavior under control.

    On large classes and blogging, which Kate mentioned, I know that Christian Sandvig at Illinois has done some interesting things here, http://bit.ly/amcBxS, but I'm not current with what he is doing, and I'm also aware that Stephen Downes and George Siemens have taught a massive online Connectivism course. But neither of those approaches may translate well to other contexts, such as a large Anthro class. There does need to be some mechanism for how students give voice to their thinking about the subject matter of the course, but whether that mechanism should include blogging, I don't know. If students are writing idiosyncratic stuff and mainly peers are reacting to it, whether that is of value to them or is instead an exercise in the blind leading the blind, or still something else, I can't say. If students are writing very similar stuff, like doing an Econ problem set, then blogging is almost certainly not the right vehicle for that.

  • Scholarship on Blogging Pedagogy
  • Posted by Kim Middleton , English at The College of Saint Rose on July 28, 2010 at 2:00pm EDT
  • It's wonderful to see people experimenting in the classroom with practices that have deeply influenced their own engagement as scholars and academics, and for that Dr. Arvan should be lauded. It's risky to try something new, especially when you aren't quite sure how students will react. Previous commenters like Pickett, MIS Prof and Jerz all note the significant thought that goes into ongoing work student bloggers: assessment practices, generic conventions, individual student approaches, etc. Implicitly, those detailed responses point to the extensive body of scholarly work on the pedagogy of blogging. In many courses, disciplines and institutions, student blogs have become a mainstay of the curriculum, and there are a variety of articles and books that describe best practices for class blogs. I'm curious, then, why little of that existing work is mentioned here?

  • Summer successes with class blogs
  • Posted by alivenaz at Arizona State University on July 29, 2010 at 3:45pm EDT
  • I just wrapped up a summer internship course that relied on blogging through Wordpress as the substitute for the journaling requirement. My reasons were two-fold - I was tired of reading journal entries and my students were scattered across the globe, so I wanted them to feel like they were part of a larger community.

    Their initial attempts were hesitant. Some shared that they were overwhelmed/intimidated/unsure about this whole blogging thing, which surprised me. I thought college students in this era were tech geniuses. At any rate, we had no choice but to dive right in: 2 required posts per week, 4 required comments on OTHER posts per week, one prompt per week. What I learned:

    1.) If they are doing internships, not all internship providers like the idea of a blog, even if its private. a local, large pet supply company balked at this and wanted to censor the intern's posts, so I just instructed the student to remove his blog and send his posts to me via Word. From now on: only private blogging, visible to only me and the rest of the class. Too bad - the blog comments from parents who missed their kids over the summer made me smile! I will have to find some alternate solution next summer.

    2.) Have blog posts labeled by assignment number, week, whatever. Otherwise, it is really hard to keep track of what posts go with what week.

    3.) Screenshots, lots of screenshots. I assumed they would know exactly what I meant with terms like "ping backs" or "discussion moderation". Nope.

    4.) Instruct them to set their discussion settings to automatically approve comments from me and from their classmates. Otherwise, there is a backlog of comments and if students are graded on making comments, it holds up the grading process.

    I loved it. As others have commented, the depth of some of the posts was quite remarkable.

  • Is it really a blog if it's private?
  • Posted by Dennis G. jerz , English -- New Media Journalism at Seton Hill University on July 30, 2010 at 2:15pm EDT
  • @alivenaz, it sounds like you really want a private message board, not a collection of student blogs. Do you have access to a content-management system, such as Blackboard?