The Disposable Blog: Using the Weblog to Facilitate Classroom Learning and Communications
Pimpare
Stephen
author
Columbia University. Social Work
Fast
Jonathan
author
Columbia University. Social Work
originator
text
Articles
2008
English
This article describes two case studies: one is from a graduate course in social work practice evaluation taught by the second author; the other is from an undergraduate political science course in media and politics taught by the first author. These cases describe the way blogs, created by students and the professors, facilitate communications within the class, reduce paperwork for the professors, and let students practice their 'public voices.' While the cases are specific to two courses-Masters-level social work and undergraduate political science-the concepts are easily transferred to others. The article begins with a history and literature review of blogs used pedagogically; next, the reader is walked through the creation of a blog using currently popular online tools; the next two sections are devoted to the two cases; and the final section attempts to draw some generalizations about using blogs in the classroom.
Philosophy of education
Information technology
Journal of Effective Teaching
8
1
3
12
2008-02
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:14337
NNC
NNC
2012-08-09 14:54:16 -0400
2012-08-13 09:19:57 -0400
8354
eng