Can Blogging Facilitate Writing Integrity?

Ensuring that students turn in original written work is a concern on many a campus these days and tackled in many diverse ways. One approach is to have students “pledge” their work to indicate that it is indeed original.

My reservations on “forcing” integrity on somebody aside, I have noticed, that in both my classes, where I ask students to blog rather than write a paper, at least thus far, the work has been original and I’ve had no reason to believe otherwise. And I wonder if there’s something inherent to blogging that somehow facilitates this?

I’m not sure that a first year student (I team teach a first year seminar class) necessarily factors in the notion that blogging implies writing for a larger audience, while blogging, so that may not be why this is happening.

However, I do think that the informal writing style that blogging lends itself to plays a role in that it allows them to think about and engage with the material and perhaps do more research because of that? Student in my class today mentioned that he did far more research and reading for his second blog post than he did for the first so he could improve. So there may be some validity to this theory of mine.

I’m not negating the benefits of making them write papers with appropriate bibliographic resources here, but trying to ascertain if the model in and of itself still works with this generation of students? Given that they are more likely to turn to Wikipedia or Google scholar, how do we leverage that intuitive behaviour to incorporate good information literacy skills? How do we make it less forced and more natural? And if we do so, and in the process also teach them to validate their information sources, would we induce better and more honest writing?

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Published in: on September 13, 2007 at 7:34 pm Leave a Comment

How To Explain Social Bookmarking To Your Dad

I wish I’d found this video when I tried to explain it to my Dad, but considering he’s off and running something worked ;-) . For those of you who are still trying, the video might come in handy.

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Published in: on August 7, 2007 at 6:48 pm Leave a Comment

Photosynth

Blown away by Blaise Aguera y Arcas’ Photosynth presentation on Ted Talks. Still processing the ramifications for visual literacy, classes on media messages, and social software-based learning.
And kudos to Microsoft – the developers of Seadragon and Photosynth – for pushing the edge here!

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Published in: on at 4:22 pm Leave a Comment

Welcome Back to the fold Aaron!

Aaron, this is in response to “But does Maine have anything to say to Texas?“; I’m with Adri on using IM over email for quick, easy, efficient conversations.  I can’t imagine life or work without my IM, and you should see my buddy list, I have to scroll up and down ;-) . It made me more accessible to my students last year, and yes, I did instruct them to first check my status to see if I was available or away. Oh, did I mention my status messages are a mile long too? And yes, I’m on Facebook, and I Twitter on a regular basis, and I still I do get serious work done.

I guess I’m a burst worker, but email can’t, just can’t, beat the efficacy of turning to a trusted colleague and friend, who is an expert in his or her area, for a quick rundown on a problem, or exchange of ideas, or even a quick hello to stay connected. For my students, the opportunity to quickly clarify something via IM as they worked on their assignments was a huge plus. OF course, they were instructed to check my status to ensure I was available first. What I got out of it was the opportunity to stay connected with them even after they had moved on to other classes and assignments.

Email has it’s place, and it’s a great way to disseminate information or communicate with a large group of people. But IM is real, one-to-one conversations, and often times, that is exactly what’s needed. As knowledge workers and information sifters, the challenge is to identify which communication tool best serves our need at the moment, and live in neither, not our email inboxes, nor our IM windows.

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Published in: on May 1, 2007 at 11:28 am Comments (1)

Podcamp in San Antonio

May 19, 2007, San Antonio will play host to Podcamp, the “unconference” on podcasting, blogging, vlogging and new social media. I’ll probably be dead tired from  conducting Tech-Beat, my semi-annual technology camp, but it looks like  something to check out, especially if Dad’s around at the time. He’s keen to learn more about these new social tools.

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Published in: on April 20, 2007 at 5:51 pm Comments (4)