Since this is round two of teaching my semester long "Web 2.0 Technologies" class, I've found myself making some changes in the curriculum and, whenever possible, "tweaking it" where necessary. This semester, my students are catching on to concepts so much quicker than my first semester students (might have something to do with my own comfort level and ability to see where we're going, too!). My students always seem to go through an initial phase of questioning themselves at every step, asking, "what do I do after I get to this page -- do I hit the "submit" button?" or "what do we do once we get here?" Now that we're into the semester a good seven weeks, they are really picking up speed. Noting this, and noting how much they were interested in inserting a map widget in their very first blog (we do two blogs - the first is structured to learn the "art of blogging"), I decided to teach this much earlier than I had the previous semester. I couldn't believe how quickly they caught on! And, of course, after they got that first widget inserted, off they go. There's no fear of HTML coding -- they're off and running! Probably most popular were the ultra simple and user-friendly Live Traffic Feeds and Live Traffic Map from Feedjit.com. I had some students use Clustrmaps, and most did well, but some failed to receive a confirmation email which left a few students a bit frustrated.
But I think the biggest surprise came two days later. One of my students, just seconds after the class let out, said, "Mrs. B - come see this!" She proceeded to show me a cluster full of dots on her visitor map and found that she had a good handful of ten or so visitors nationwide reading her review on Picnik.com. She was all grins! I'm particularly interested in what the student's maps will look like tomorrow after our four day weekend!
Part of me did not really expect much out of the visitor maps/live visitor feeds this early. I'd even told the students that it could take a month or so to start seeing visitors, relating my own blogging experiences. What a nice surprise to be proven wrong, and what a great experience for my first time blogging students!
Tomorrow we head into new territory -- how to find blogs that inspire us and compel us to engage and/or comment. It's that whole read/write connection that I'm subtly trying to expose the students to.
Monday, February 18, 2008
Wizards at Widgets!
Posted by
JBlack
at
12:57 PM
Labels: blogging, Fidjit, visitor maps, widgets
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Wild for Widgets! I was reviewing my "Walk a Mile" blogpost, and I wanted to thank you for your important comment. I backtracked to your blog, and read this wonderful post about your students' blogging experiences.
ReplyDeleteI remember when my first readers started to show up on my maps and other statistics widgets, so I can relate to the author of Picnik.com.
Like you, my readership didn't grow quite that fast. On reason is that we are targeting a very specific audience. Understanding data mining and online user habits can help online authors select a blog name that is attractive to new readers. It seems that you have taught your students well;D
Some college students, who share information with me, told me about http://mon.itor.us/, another analytics widget. I am not totally satisfied with the four (yes, 4) statistical widgets I currently use.
Individually, each widget has a cool attribute, and together I receive a good bit of feedback. My programming friends/colleagues think that I can get more information with this program. I plan to try it.
Keep up the great work. I will check in from time to time. Thanks for the inspiration.
Are these college students, high school students, or adult learners?
ReplyDeleteDo you have your students use an aggregator of some kind to collect the blogs they find, or do they simply bookmark them?
jsb16 -
ReplyDeleteThese are high school students and I do have them use RSS. Currently they are using Google Reader, and later on they'll learn Netvibes.
JBlack
I would like to suggest pageflakes.com. I use it, and I store several hundred blogs and other feeds.
ReplyDeletePageflakes is especially good for visual learners.
You can organize your feeds by categories and create a webpage for that category. It is very intuitive in its functioning processes.
If you want to, you can make any flake public. Then others can share your feed.
Some teachers even use Pageflakes as a website/lesson start page. Mr. Bakin's ESL Intermediate/Low class pageflake is an excellent example.
Thanks for sharing. I found Picnik is a very interesting tool for editing photos.
ReplyDelete