Reading & Literacy

Blogs Versus Blahs

December 27, 2004 3 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

If Donald, a freshman at East Side Community High School in New York City, wasn’t actually in a shell, he could’ve easily fit into one. “His body would literally touch his knees—that’s the position he would be in to read a book,” says Sarvenaz Zelkha, his humanities teacher. “He would never speak in front of others.”

But something happened in Zelkha’s class this past year that helped Donald (not his real name) come out of hiding—his enthusiasm for the in-class Web logging that East Side encourages among its students. Freshman and sophomore classes maintain full-blown “blogs”—Web sites that allow for interaction among students. They post journals, place papers they’re working on in digital “folders,” and share memoirs and poetry that they’re composing.

“When Donald got into blogging, he came alive,” Zelkha says. “He reacted to what other people placed on the blog. I think this medium provided him with a comfort zone where he could connect. He even made friends with two boys through blogging.”

Patrick Delaney, a school librarian and coordinator of the San Francisco-based Educational Bloggers Network, estimates that some 1,000 teachers from kindergarten through high school have established blogs, which he calls “digital paper,” for their classrooms. Peter Grunwald, president of Grunwald Associates, a Maryland-based firm that does surveys of educational technology, predicts that it “will become more prevalent as kids—but also as teachers—become more comfortable with the technology.” Advocates of in-class curricular blogging say its rising popularity speaks to its ability to let students help teach each other. “If students are writing for an audience other than their teacher, it brings them out and makes them more thoughtful,” Zelkha says. “Blogging raises the standard of the whole room.”

'If students are writing for an audience other than their teacher, it brings them out and makes them more thoughtful.'

In 2003-04, at Oakdale Elementary School in Ijamsville, Maryland, 2nd grade teacher Marisa Dudiak and Catherine Poling, who taught 3rd grade, introduced blogs in several subjects, and their classes collaborated on a nature blog. Pupils made observations in the school’s outdoor habitat, which features birdhouses, a butterfly garden, and a stream. Students were asked, “What’s under that flat rock?” “How did the trees change from last season to this?” Every child had a tidbit to add. “This was especially true for my non-writers,” says Dudiak, “who didn’t especially enjoy working with pen and paper. But when we gave them the opportunity to blog, they would peck up a storm.”

In California, English students at Calvine High School,in Sacramento, and Maple High School, north of Santa Barbara, paired blogs last spring to create an online literature circle. The students, all of whom were lagging academically, read the memoir Always Running: La Vida Loca: Gang Days in LA. The culmination was a live videoconference with author Luis Rodriguez. “The kids were armed with questions,” says Shawn Hamilton, the Calvine teacher involved with the project. “Here was the author of a book they’d read, and there was some awe. But the kids grew comfortable right away.”

But even blog backers acknowledge the medium’s drawbacks. “A blog is so spontaneous, and student posts are typically full of errors of syntax and grammar,” Hamilton says. “If an entire class revolves around this, where will students get the instruction they need in conventions of the language? That’s especially true in alternative schools such as ours, where most kids arrive not adequately trained in English.”

The medium also faces funding and teacher-training hurdles. “There’s some fear attached to this,” Dudiak says. “A colleague will say, ‘I’ve got so much on my plate already, and I’m not technologically savvy enough.’” Delaney adds that when a district faces a budget crunch, tech support for extras like blogs becomes one of the first items cut.

But for the students it reaches, blogging seems to get a firm thumbs up. It “helps you understand computers,” says Nichole Butler, a 14-year-old at East Side who has her own home page linked to the freshman blog. “If someone writes a paper and puts it up on the blog, you can write your comments and make the paper sound better.”

As for Donald, he’s still an avid blogger and now a bit less antisocial. “There’s a liveliness and accessibility in his work that’s not evident in person,” says Kiran Chaudhuri, his current English teacher. “He’s quite personable, actually, when he’s blogging.”

—Grant Pick

Related Tags:

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
College & Workforce Readiness Webinar
Smarter Tools, Stronger Outcomes: Empowering CTE Educators With Future-Ready Solutions
Open doors to meaningful, hands-on careers with research-backed insights, ideas, and examples of successful CTE programs.
Content provided by Pearson
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Professional Development Webinar
Recalibrating PLCs for Student Growth in the New Year
Get advice from K-12 leaders on resetting your PLCs for spring by utilizing winter assessment data and aligning PLC work with MTSS cycles.
Content provided by Otus
School Climate & Safety Webinar Strategies for Improving School Climate and Safety
Discover strategies that K-12 districts have utilized inside and outside the classroom to establish a positive school climate.

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

Reading & Literacy How to Build a Reading Block: Two Teachers Share Their Approaches
Studies don't prescribe how best to knit together components of reading—leaving it up to teachers to devise.
7 min read
Students in Anjanette McNeely's class work on their letters during a reading block at Windridge Elementary School in Kaysville, Utah, on Dec. 4, 2025.
What's the best way to attend to all the elements of the 'science of reading' in a literacy block? Research doesn't specify a specific answer, but kindergarten teacher Anjanette McNeely has designed hers to incorporate foundational skills, content, and writing. McNeely's class works on their letters at Windridge Elementary School in Kaysville, Utah, on Dec. 4, 2025.
Niki Chan Wylie for Education Week
Reading & Literacy Many Teens Lack Basic Reading Skills. These Teachers Are Trying to Change That
Schools are building programs to provide sustained reading support to older students.
6 min read
Loralyn LaBombard, a reading specialist, reads “Among the Hidden” by Margaret Peterson Haddix with a group of students in a 7th grading reading class at Bow Memorial School in Bow, N.H., on Oct. 29, 2025.
Loralyn LaBombard, a reading specialist, reads <i>Among the Hidden</i> by Margaret Peterson Haddix with a group of students in a 7th grade reading class at Bow Memorial School in Bow, N.H., on Oct. 29, 2025. Nationally, experts say there is a lack of resources available to help middle and high school students learn basic reading skills.
Sophie Park for Education Week
Reading & Literacy From Our Research Center Secondary Students Are Struggling With Reading, Too. A Look at the Landscape
Exclusive survey findings outline how educators perceive the obstacles affecting older students' reading.
5 min read
Students attend Bow Memorial School in Bow, N.H. on Oct. 29, 2025. Bow Memorial School is a middle school that has developed a systematic approach to addressing foundational reading gaps in middle school students.
New data show that many educators report that middle and high school students struggle with aspects of foundational literacy. At Bow Memorial School in Bow, N.H., pictured on Oct. 29, 2025, students work with reading specialist Loralyn LaBombard, who has helped pioneer a systematic approach to addressing foundational reading gaps in grades 5 to 8.
Sophie Park for Education Week
Reading & Literacy When Older Students Can't Read: How This Middle School Is Tackling Literacy
Structured literacy classes at a New Hampshire middle school have helped some students crack the code.
14 min read
A student shows their spelling of the word “knew” during an exercise in a fifth grade structured literacy class at Bow Memorial School in Bow, N.H. on Oct. 29, 2025. Bow Memorial School is a middle school that has developed a systematic approach to addressing foundational reading gaps in middle school students.
Bow Memorial School has developed a systematic approach to addressing foundational reading gaps among middle schoolers, integrating sound-letter skills with a rich diet of reading materials. A student shows their spelling during an exercise in a 5th grade class at the school in Bow, N.H. on Oct. 29, 2025.
Sophie Park for Education Week