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March 17, 2013

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WiscPrincipal

Bill -

As always, I love reading what you share. I love your suggestion to recruit parents to become readers and commenters. That idea just makes sense as it also creates a connection between home and school. It may allow a parent to better support the child's learning, but it is also a way for teachers to promote all the good that happens in a classroom.

Keep up your excellence!

Curt

MrMacnology

I really appreciate these ideas Bill. I especially like the focused topic. I'm guessing you've created quite the movement within your classroom. I may borrow, share, reproduce this in the near future. Thank you.

John T. Spencer

I've found similar success with multiple blogs on different topics and setting up blogging cadres. But even that takes awhile to evolve.

Bill Ferriter

John wrote:

Ive found similar success with multiple blogs on different topics and
setting up blogging cadres. But even that takes awhile to evolve.


- - - - - -

Johns on to something here, yall: Blogging projects take patience -- for teachers AND for students.

Ive seen kids and teachers get really discouraged when they dont get a ton of visitors from day one.

Thats unrealistic thinking. Building an audience takes time for everyone.

I think Id make that another suggestion: Be patient. Be persistent. Youll get an audience -- just not from day one.

Bill

Bill Ferriter

Mr. Mac wrote:

I may borrow, share, reproduce this in the near future. Thank you.


- - - - - -

Please do, Pal! Borrowing, sharing and reproducing is the whole point of jumping in the stream, right?

Together we all grow stronger!

Looking forward to seeing how you improve on the idea,
Bill

Bill Ferriter

Curt wrote:

It may allow a parent to better support the childs learning, but it is
also a way for teachers to promote all the good that happens in a
classroom.

- - - - - - - -

I like it, Curt. Our blogs can become, in a way, our own PR machines, cant they?

When parents can look inside a classroom through the lens of the blogs that their kids are creating, they are more likely to be supportive and encouraging.

And schools need all the support and encouragement that they can get!

Hope youre well, BTW.
Bill

Joel

It is not easy to get this kind of tips even from experts. Got it, thanks for it.

Lisa

The site is so cute and thoughtful! Totally agree, it's best to focus on one topic. This is gonna be a hit,-- now I can't get enough of #sugarkills --love it!

Molly Stevens

I just started doing something similar with my students. We actually use it to promote short stories written in class. Each student get's his or her story featured on the blog at some point during the year. Every week we bring in the laptop cart. They can bring the computer right to their school desk and get working. They have all started to take pride in putting on a great story on the blog.

Susan

This is great!

"...To address this challenge, I always recruits volunteer readers and commenters when my students are working on a blogging project.

"Most of the time these volunteers are parents or PTA members who want to help at school but can't find the time to get away from work during the day. I ask them to monitor the blog for a month at a time and to leave two or three comments a week that are designed to challenge students..."

That's an excellent idea, and it also teaches one more very useful lesson you didn't mention directly in the post:

Hey kids, don't forget, your parents can see what you put on the Internet in public!

;)

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    Bill Ferriter teaches 6th grade language arts in North Carolina, where he was named a Regional Teacher of the Year for 2005-2006.

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