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Edublogs: Virtual classrooms and online faculty rooms

04/25/08

Posted under Education

By Candice Montenegro
INQUIRER.net

WE’RE always told that the world is our classroom. Now, blogging gives a whole new meaning to that cliché and proves there really is a virtual classroom in the world (wide web).

Edublogs are blogs primarily used for educational purposes. These include blogs written by teachers (for a class or co-teachers) and those maintained by students for a particular school subject or class.

The blog is becoming a popular outlet for education-related discussions because it provides a fast and convenient way to share insights, resources and even homework. It is easy to update regularly, and feedback can come in the form of comments.

Edublogs are a great way for teachers to find information related to their discipline or interests. Edublogs.org, for instance, categorizes other edublogs, offering an organized list of links related to the subject you need. It can also be used to communicate with teachers from other schools and even other parts of the world.

Teachers also use edublogs to provide additional input for a class. Examples and homework can be posted on a blog. Teachers can post tips or even website links and activities to help students understand a particular lesson. The edublogs then become a convenient extension of the class discussion.

Other teachers also use edublogs to communicate with the class. Announcements and schedules can be posted on a blog that both student and parent can access. It removes the need to print and distribute letters with reply slips that are often not returned on time anyway.

Edublogs are also very beneficial for students. Just as teachers post tips and extra input, the students can post questions and clarifications through comments. And the good thing is other students can join in the discussion and learn from others’ questions as well. It becomes an online class recitation, where everybody replies almost instantaneously to the comments.

It can also be used as a collaborative tool for the class, especially when students post their insights on a particular topic or subject. Some edublogs even cater to students from different schools that are taking up the same class. Working in a group becomes much easier, and the easy archiving enables students to just click on a link and go back to a discussion that he or she missed.

The advantage of an edublog is its accessibility. Often, there is not enough time to discuss everything inside the classroom. Not all students are given the chance to speak up, while some consciously choose not to recite at all. Edublogs give both teachers and students an almost unlimited ability to communicate, so that everyone has an equal chance to participate in the discussion.

On the other hand, edublogs will only serve their purpose if all students have access to the Internet. In the Philippines, only 15 percent of our population had Internet access in 2007, and some students do not even have their own books, let alone their own computers. While it may work for private schools and universities, it will take time before they can become truly beneficial for all our students and teachers.

Nevertheless, the edublog is just one of the many innovations that will push education forward, so that it can continuously adapt to the changing times. It provides a different approach to teacher-student communication and even faculty relations, and proves that learning can indeed go beyond the four walls of the classroom.





3 Feedbacks on "Edublogs: Virtual classrooms and online faculty rooms"



Joel C. Yuvienco

Thanks for the interesting introduction to edublogs Candice! Now for a sample college edublog-supported class on Information Systems (in a private school south of Manila, please click on DLS-C. For what it is worth.



Clare Li

Dear Candice Montenegro,

This is Clare Li from eChineseLearning in Beijing,China. I’m very much interested in your blog. We would like to offer you and your readers some free 1 on 1 live Chinese lessons online to help you to get to know China better. Of course, we would love to hear your comments about our service.You may reach me at clare.li@echineselearning.com

Please let me know if you’re interested. Looking forward to your reply.

Thanks,
Clare Li



Llonard Yap

Things have actually gone beyond blogging, e.g., onlinelearningschool.co.cc are Filipino tutors mentoring kids in the US, Canada, UK and Australia. They earn dollars per hour of instruction without ever leaving the Philippines. The site’s architecture is patterned after a virtual campus that even includes a school shopping strip and a full-scale bookstore online.

Virtual classrooms have webcams and full voice (like conversing face to face), whiteboard (and students can write on it like writing on a real blackboard with a chalkbox full of colors) and shared view (that pulls in any resources from the web). All sessions are recorded for tutors quality control, child security and student review files.



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