Asking learners to embark on a learning journey using blogging is asking learners to take a step into the unknown. Blogging is not just about writing skills, it is about cultivating critical self-reflection and promoting self-efficacy and confidence to give voice to ideas and express and discuss opinions among others in a respectful, inclusive manner. Blogging is about giving oneself permission to engage fellow learners and oneself, as both, simultaneously, as a novitiate and mentor. Blogging involves tackling threshold concepts that can lead to personal transformations:
Emerging roles as a learner/speaker
Identity of the individual and embedded selves
Holding aloft a number of different perspectives without identifying with them as part of one’s own identity
Accomodating shifts of perspective when views collide or bounce off one another
Merging horizons of perspective of self/selves and others
Sponsorship and healing
Advocacy for personal vision
Cultivating personal voice
Offering constructive feedback to self and others
Sharing one’s views in a blog requires vulnerability, a confidence of one’s voice, and an ability to reflect on ideas as separate from one’s identity, so that through the sharing of ideas with others and within oneself, stories might become more apparent, more complex, more contextualized. Sharing one’s intuitions, one’s fuzziness of thought, can open up insights as to how we juggle our “roles”, in relation to others, in relation to our dreams, hopes, expectations, demands.
Setting up blogging within a course requires careful planning, a clear set of goals and expectations. But most importantly, a course that requires blogging from its learners needs to build gradually upon an equalized, respectful give-and-take between all who participate.
Blogging as a technology, as a teaching tool, can be most effective when the conventional mindset that permeates educational practice be set aside. There can be no room for dependency, insecurity, compulsion, or worry between learners and mentors. This paradigm exists to various degrees in a classroom; it cannot exist in a blogging environment.
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Comments
Hi Glenn,
Great blog -- you are becoming such a leader in this area -- I love reading your blogs as they inspire me. I going to present in several professional venues where people have none to some expossure to blogging and I want to put together a few powerpoint presentations to help me clarify what priorities I need to put order for the learning process and hopefully to help learners engage with their own blogging needs -- as well as other e-learning.
I agreee that "buid gradually upon an equlaized, respectful give-and-take between all" is important -- and this is probably one of the challenges -- so no one feels intimidated, too frustrated, but rather that the group feels the excitement of possibilites together and even outside their own group -- to the bigger blogging world.
Good to be back on Me2U. I've been busy in ipeace -- over 15,500 people and amazing sharing.
Cheers, Jo Ann