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Tuesday, October 14, 2003

Weblogs for mentoring

I don't use weblogs myself in teaching, as I don't really see an application for my subject (math) right now other than possibly as a simple course blog for announcements or some such. What did get me interested in the idea of weblogs in education a few years back was looking at Lloyd Nebres' The Internet Classroom and the Advanced Internet Classroom, part of UC Berkeley's Academic Talent Development Program. (See AIC2003 for the latest version of the latter course, for example.) It's been written about before, so rather than re-articulating points already well articulated elsewhere, let me point you to the excellent 2000 article (originally called A Pedagogy of Nudges) by Laura Shefler. The whole article is interesting and relevant; please read at least the first page to see what I'm talking about in the following.

The key to the process is Lloyd. Lloyd's avocation is mentoring, an avocation he practices with these kids not only during the summer course itself, but often long afterwards. Links to their individual weblogs line his own weblog's sidebar. Though he teaches at Berkeley only for the six weeks of the course (he appears to spend much of his time in Maui), his posts reflect his continuing involvement with his mentees (here and here and here and ... )

Two factors I think keep the kids motivated to write:

  • Each has his/her own personal weblog. Most not only post to their weblogs, they often design very individualistic decors for them. Their weblogs become something they own, their own personal space, their own voice - not a class weblog run by a teacher that they're invited (or expected) to contribute to, in which their individual identities become merged into a collective identity.
  • There's a community here, but not a community of writers as much as a community of listeners. Lloyd and the other students not only listen, they respond, and nothing is more motivating for continued blogging than someone else saying "I'm listening".

How well would this sort of setup work in general for education? It's obviously very labour intensive; not many of us have the time or energy for mentoring at this level. I'd guess it'd probably not work at all if the aim is to get students blogging about some course topic they may or may not find interesting or relevant. Lloyd's kids are most involved when they're writing about something that's personally meaningful to themselves, their own lives. What's going on here is not so much learning as self-actualization: kids discovering who they are and what's important to them by writing about themselves, with the aid of a very capable mentor.

Lloyd is using blogs in what I think is their most powerful educational form: nurturing individual thought rather than community discussion or collaboration. I like Laura Shefler's take on it: " 'constructing knowledge' does not necessarily mean constructing consensus". Successful community blogs do exist, but they tend to be the work of several editors collecting newsbits rather than thought-out expression - Boing Boing rather than Riverbend. In my opinion, weblogs, at their best and most powerful, are the work of individuals, not communities. If we're going to use blogs in education, I think that this individuality is the aspect we need to foster most, whether within a course structure or outside one.

Some time in the future - perhaps in the very distant future - I think mentoring will become an essential part of education. Learning is already becoming more distributed across space and time, and we've started to look at teaching content online via disconnected "learning object" chunks instead of full courses. As this trend continues, mentors could very well become the keystones of learning, helping students to integrate the various strands of what they're learning into a meaningful whole, to make sense of it all. Alexei Panshin's science fiction classic Rite of Passage presents one possible model for a mentored learning future. Mentoring by blogs - or whatever they evolve into - could be another useful way to go.

Posted by June Lester at 09:00 AM in Uses of Weblogs in Education, Case Studies | Permalink

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Comments

I support my courses with weblogs in much the same way that I used to support them with newspaper clippings. As I come across interesting news items related to a course I simply post it to the course blog. To me it seems more efficient than clipping and overhead process that I used before. In Radio you can click to indicate which blogs a particular posting should be posted in. Also I add titles and the google it option to encourage students to get more involved. Bruce Landon's Weblog for Students has links to all of the course blogs.

The instuctor benefit for me is that I can organize my eClippings as I go and comment as I like. Perhaps this coming term I will use content from the blogs in the discussion forum assignments to "provoke" more student involvement in a medium that extends beyond the course. -- BL

Posted by: Bruce Landon at October 14, 2003 11:52 AM

You might be interested that June's comments were seen by the author of the site she was writing about - cf. http://l.editthispage.com/ about a quarter of the way down. Nice illustration of how people with blogs know when they are being talked about.

Posted by: Scott Leslie at October 16, 2003 10:58 AM

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