Archive for December 6th, 2005

Edublog Awards 2005

Tuesday, December 6th, 2005

I am honored to make the shortlist for the 2005 International Edublog Awards in the category: “best teachers blog“. Being in the best teachers category really touches my heart and I appreciate the affirmation from my fine blogging colleagues, any one of which could just as well ended up on the shortlist. Gosh, it was hard enough to make two nominations per category, now how am I ever going to choose just one out of four? The final voting is open from now until December 17th.

I have met so many incredible educators through blogging. The best part is that the list keeps growing!

Discovering relevance and making connections

Tuesday, December 6th, 2005

Students need time to make connections to what they are learning. When we finish teaching a topic, our students need time to think about the pros and cons, discuss the relevance, and make connections to other things in their life. We talk about having them engaged in their learning. Many times doing my teaching I have found that what we are teaching to our students lacks the personal relevance necessary for any meaning. It may be relevant to us as educators and we believe it should be relevant to the students but we have to give them time to talk with others, explore and enjoy the learning. We have to lead them to the relevance. This is why classroom discussions are so important.

I’d like to suggest that conversations on weblogs are ideal to help students discover relevance and make connections to what they are learning. Weblogs can be used to explain what they have learned in their own words. Then students have the opportunity to learn from comments from others. It gives the discussion a much wider circle. Too often our classroom discussions
end up being dominated by the teacher and one or two verbal students.

I started this post the other day and discovered two great posts this morning that relate to this topic. Dean posted My Theory of Relativity. Be sure to read his entire post - good thinking and good conversations always emerge from Dean’s blog. Then Darren responds with Habit of Mind. He talks about how each discipline facilitates a different habit of mind. The value is in the habit of mind that the learning facilitates.