For my additional reading this week, I chose “Adventures in
blogosphere: from blog readers to blog writers” by Ducate and Lomicka. The researchers followed L2/FL learners
over the course of one academic year.
In the first semester, students functioned as the blog readers of native
speakers; in the second semester, they became the blog writers in that
language.
I thought that
Ducate abnd Lomicka did an excellent job of outlining the fundamental
educational purposes of blogging—they continuously reminded the reader of
exactly how blogging can impact student learning. Some of the communicative buzzwords that surfaced in the
piece were: interactivity, collaboration, self expression, and self
empowerment. A handful of phrases
that were associated with blogs included: middle space, contribut[ing] to a
resurgence in journaling, social constructivism, genuine audience, and peer
reviewed. All very good stuff.
When the dust settled—when the last blogs were
posted/commented/read, the questionnaires were administered, the focus groups
were gathered, and the subsequent data could be analyzed—the researchers’
findings were unsurprisingly positive for blogs. To me, the most interesting detail that surfaced in this
study was the “pattern” that the researchers found when examining students’ “blogging
assimilation” (my words). In their
words, they claim, “We noticed
that students followed a specific pattern as they moved from being blog readers
to blog writers” (Ducate and Lomicka, p. 13). These eight steps were: (1) Exploring the blogosphere, (2)
Selecting the Blogger, (3) Getting to know the Blogger, (4) Connecting with the
Blogger, (5) Articulating the identity of the Blogger, (6) Exploring blogging
in the FL, (7) Establishing identity as FL Blogger, and (8) Forming a blog
community.
If you’re interested in blogging for educational purposes,
what you can do with them in a classroom, and how they might impact student
learning, I think that you’ll find this article to be a solid read.