This article does a good job of summing up blogs and all the wonderful ways they can be incorporated into your classroom. Blogs are a simple way to get your students involved in using technology as a way of expressing themselves and sharing their own thoughts and ideas with others. Blogs can also be used in a variety of ways, teachers can use them to showcase their students work, students can use them to comment and provide feedback on each other’s work (teachers and parents can comment as well) and it can be used as a tool for keeping parents informed of what is happening in their child’s classroom. Students also get the chance to work on their writing skills and become more aware of what they are writing with the use of blogs because they know that they are published works that can be viewed by others. I feel as though blogs make learning more fun and exciting for the students because it’s a different way of doing things. Blogs are also a great way for students to show their creativity and express themselves.
This article introduces effective ways in which students can organize their thoughts, ideas and understandings about what they are reading. The double-entry diary helps students keep track of important information found in the text and their understanding of the text. I think this is a great way to help students make connections with the text and truly understand what they are reading. Students are also required to individually do further research on a specific pirate and record their findings on a DRC (data retrieval chart). Student use a DRC to help organize information obtained from the various texts they read, this helps with students reading comprehension as well.
The idea of combining both historical fiction and non-fiction books, I feel is a wonderful way to allow students to experience different types of literature as well as have sources to help them decide what is true and what is false about a particular subject. Having a variety of texts, which include both fiction and non-fiction, will also help in providing reading material for students at various reading levels.
This article is also full of great ideas, I especially like the suggestions for beginning the lesson with pirate music and an array of pirate centered materials. The idea of allowing students to first browse through the various materials and take note of what they see is a wonderful way to engage the students. In the article the use of a KWL chart is also presented, students keep track of their thoughts about what they know, want to know, and have learned in their own “Pirate Diary”. Finally it is extremely important for teachers to select books that capture their student’s attention and use a variety of activities to keep them engaged.