Tuesday, April 3, 2007

Give some suggestions about how to enhance the lecture presentation by Blogging

Leaner should make good use of blog to leaning.
  • Leaner should make good use of blog to leaning.
  • The blog should provide many leaning information to the student to be downloaded.
  • Using the blog to share information and communication with each other.
  • You can put your opinion on the blog. Other people can give you some advices, which can
  • give you some help for you learning.
  • Using the blog as a answer tool.
  • Student can use blog to facilitate review and after-school rehearsals
  • Off-line blog tool ----Someone recently referred me to a tool to use for off-line blogging. Apparently it allows users to write their blogs off-line. They can connect to the internet at a later time and upload their blogs. It works with Blogger, Moveable Type, and several others. For more information go to the blogjet web site.
  • More about technology tools --The first is the e-Learning Centre’s Guide to e-Learning. It has a great section on Blogging and RSS. From there I located How to use weblogs to create engaging learning experiences.
  • Blogs vs. Discussion Forums---I just finished reading the Blog Lit Review and it seems to me that there is a distinct difference between using a blog and using a discussion forum that is being overlooked.
    Blogs are intended to allow individuals to express their thoughts and opinions on the web. They are typically written by one person for others to read, like a public journal or diary.
    Though the option for readers to comment on a blog post is often available, it is limited and not the main function or focus of blogging.
    Discussion forums and message boards on the other hand are built to support the give and take of community discussions. Multiple contributors post to threaded, searchable, archived discussion topics, debating every imaginable subject.
    It seems to me that lumping blogs and discussion forums together or using one to perform the functions of the other are exercises in futility. Sure, you can use a wrench to drive a nail into a wall, but it would be a heck of a lot easier to use a hammer. Every good toolbox should have multiple tools and selecting the right one for the job is half the battle.

Blog that can be used to improve teaching and learning.

 

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