"Blog" Pilot Project at
the Faculty Support Centre
This fall, the Faculty Support Centre
will be testing out a "blog" service which
will allow interested faculty to create and use blogs
as a tool in their courses.
What's a Blog,
and why would I want to create one?
"Blog" is short for weblog.
A blog is an easy to use personal website/web journal,
where you can quickly post thoughts and interact with
people. A blog can include journal entries, commentaries,
criticisms and/or recommendations authored by the user
- often with links to updated headlines, news articles
and other information from other sites which the user
finds interesting and which back up their commentary
with evidence.
Perhaps the best known blog hosting site,
where users can create and post their blogs free of
charge, Blogger (http://www.blogger.com),
defines blogs as "
a personal diary. A daily
pulpit. A collaborative space. A political soapbox.
A breaking-news outlet. A collection of links. Your
own private thoughts. Memos to the world
In simple
terms, a blog is a web site, where you write stuff on
an ongoing basis. New stuff shows up at the top, so
your visitors can read what's new. Then they comment
on it or link to it or email you. Or not."
Blogs in Education
Currently, weblogs are used to support
learning most often in K-12 education. Students using
blogs today in K-12 will be bringing their learning
experiences and familiarity with the web as an online
learning environment with them when they attend university.
They join the "at least 3 million Americans who
have created blogs, with similar numbers being seen
worldwide."1
Students use blogs to create personal
journals, or for group work/seminars and interactive
discussions, to highlight a few uses. Blogs are sometimes
used by teachers to replace standard class webpages,
for which they are a basic and easy to use alternative,
containing postings of class times and assignment notifications,
required or suggested readings, and so on. Blogs are
simply structured, normally with a title field (even
that is optional) and entry field for the content (captured
and displayed chronologically). When posted, the content
appears with date and time of posting. Sometimes the
title, name or IP address of the blogger, links to other
content, or a "comment" link can also be added.
Where a "comment" link appears allowing other
readers to reply to the blog posting, students have
access to ideas and opinions from users the world over.
For more information on the development
and uses of blogging in education (including both pros
and cons) and some examples of blogs, see the article
on Educational
Blogging by Stephen Downes in Educause Review,
September/October 2004.
More Information
Faculty members who want to find out more
about how a blog works or who are interested in assistance
in setting up a blog for use in their class, can contact
the Faculty Support Centre staff at ext. 55800 or by
email at faculty@yorku.ca.
1Stephen Downes, Educational
Blogging. Educause Review, Sept/Ocober 2004, Vol
39, No. 5, p. 2
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