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Tech-Enhanced Writing: Strategies and Safety Tips

EducationWorld is committed to bringing educators the practical tools they need to make good decisions, engage in effective leadership and implement strategies that work. To further this commitment, we have formed a content partnership with Stenhouse Publishers. EducationWorld is pleased to feature a variety of book excerpts as part of this collaboration. Check back frequently as we feature additional excerpts from Stenhouse titles.

The following excerpt comes from chapter 1 of Can We Skip Lunch and Keep Writing?, by Julie D. Ramsay (Stenhouse Publishers, 2011). The book retails for $20 and is available on the Stenhouse Web site.

This excerpt explains how Web platforms such as Moodle can enhance writing assignments, as well as how you can keep students safe when using online tools. Be sure to check out two more excerpts from this book: Got Wikis? Grab Great Project Ideas and Digital Storytelling Breathes New Life Into Lessons.

In the years since our first electronic pen-pal (e-pal) experiments, we have moved beyond basic letter writing to collaborating through a safe and secure, adjustable learning environment called Moodle. A free, open-source network, Moodle can be downloaded to a server and made available to anyone who is given access to it. Students uploaded photos, used the discussion boards, participated in chat room discussions, and created wikis together, all in this protected environment.

Through this platform my students have the opportunity to discuss ideas with other learners across the country in a much more up-to-the-minute mode. Before I used technology tools, we would only be able to write three e-pal letters a year through postal mail. Using e-mail attachments, we could usually have six correspondences in a school year. With Moodle, we can have several correspondences a day from school or home. All of the students can be online at the same time, responding to questions, asking questions, telling about a recent event in their lives, or brainstorming about an upcoming project.

Whether my learners are reading a letter they received from their e-pals or a response on Moodle, I often get spontaneous comments such as this one: “Hey, Mrs. Ramsay, they are reading Island of the Blue Dolphins like us. He said he thought the book was boring and I told him exactly why it’s an exciting book. They haven’t done a squid dissection, so I’m going to tell them all about it.”


About Stenhouse Publishers

Stenhouse publishes professional development books and videos by teachers and for teachers. Their titles cover a range of content areas -- from literacy and mathematics to science, social studies, the arts, and environmental education -- as well as a variety of topics, including classroom management, assessment, and differentiation.

Regardless of the communication method, my students are always eager to respond quickly to their learning partners, something that technology enables them to do. When I announce that it’s time to stop and go to PE or lunch, they often say, “Aw, do we have to? Can we skip lunch and keep writing?”

As I reflect on this, I wonder what has changed. I’ve taught writing before. I’ve had projects with technology before. I’ve had learning teams before. So what’s different? It is this: Students no longer view writing as assignments directed by me. They are the ones in control, engaged in meaningful work enhanced by technology.

Internet Safety

Because many of my students have parents serving in the military overseas or do not live with both of their parents, I want to ensure that they have the opportunity to share their writing, no matter the distance. Technology tools provide a perfect solution to this challenge. I built a very simple class Web site and use it to post my students’ projects, photos, accomplishments, and classroom news and updates. This broadened the audience for which they were writing, while strengthening the connection between home and school.

I chose to build a Web site and obtain a private domain for a nominal price, but there are other free venues available, such as Google's Blogger, edublogs, and Weebly. Today many districts provide server space for each teacher. Blogs and wikis are also free and easy to use. Many of them come with built-in security features.

When students register at our school, their parents sign a basic media release form. However, to further ensure the children’s safety, we use only first names to identify online writing. We also change personal information. My students refer to their “secret identities,” which serves as a springboard for discussions about Internet safety and digital citizenship.

A good resource for teaching online “netiquette” is Net Cetera: Chatting with Kids About Being Online, a free publication from the Federal Trade Commission (2010). We read and discuss this publication in class, and then the students take it home to share with their parents. While discussing Internet safety, I have the students explain the importance of each of the safety precautions, making it a personally relevant lesson.
 

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