Why Wiki? Why Blog?
"...we can fulfill the idea that the classroom is a meeting place for the exchange and evolution of ideas."[1]
Stewart Mader
At parent-teacher-student conferences, families like to know not only how their child is doing, but also if they are learning things of interest and value to them in ways that reflect each child's personality and talents. It's always reassuring to hear a child explain the projects they really enjoyed, and to note the learning the student sometimes didn't even realize had occurred. In the retelling, the learning overflowed.
How does school help students develop their talents? their interests? their curiosity? their community? How does a wiki welcome students to learning?
Teaching and learning are social activities; today's kids are connected in ways that no adult over twenty-five could have imagined just five years ago. Students today enjoy the connectedness of social networking; it is part of their very being. My goal is to bring my instruction into that cloud to teach the content required in ways that inspire online responsibility and ethics in this new, very public world. To that end, Parker and Chao summarize the research on the benefits of using a wiki in the classroom:
The collaborative and public nature of the wiki helps students understand and collaborate in a continuous publishing process in which their strengths and talents add to the research and product.
I've always believed that I learn from my students, and that I need to know them and what they need in order to teach well. I also believe that learning is a social activity, and that we learn by participating. In addition, I know that all kids can learn, and that they are "smart" in different ways. Finally, a student can learn if s/he can see a target, has various supporting structures and resources, and has the opportunity and time to practice and improve with continuous feedback. A wiki provides the struture for all of those pedagogical implications:
Learning activities engage students in projects/products that benefit or inform others in real situations with options for students that promote their interests and strengths.
Learning resources involve in-hand, multi-media, primary, or "live" venues from which students can learn both the information and the process of gathering, analyzing, and synthesizing the learned concepts.
Learning supports provide the feedback and structure for students to succeed, according to their needs.
This diagram pulls all these ideas together to show what a classroom wiki can include:
From Peter Jones [3][4]
Students can choose different kinds or different levels of learning activities, all of which offer the opportunity to learn the requirements of the lesson with the additional wiki benefit of peer/teacher collaboration and feedback so that the final product meets the expected standard. The wiki allows links and lists of possible learning resources (to which students can add) with the benefit of availability 24/7 if online. Learning supports improve from the collaboration and feedback by/with students; the feedback guides the teacher into providing additional instructions, handouts, templates, strategies, organizers, and resources as needed for students to succeed. Everything is visible and transparent, supportive of all students and styles. It builds the conversation and the community through a 21st Century cmmunication connection.
[5]
From Common Craft [6]
Students today enjoy the connectedness of social networking; it is part of their very being. My goal is to bring my instruction into that cloud through educational networks to teach the content required in ways that inspire online responsibility and ethics in this new, very public world.
Ms. Edwards
Please look around on this site, then email me with your comments: ms_edwards@mac.com
Thanks.
by Paul Maharg (Glasgow Graduate School of Law) [7]
Footnotes