Saturday, 12 February 2011

I, For One, Welcome Our New Blogging Overlords…

Blogging may have solved one of the most pressing problems that has perplexed the education world for years: how to get boys to write properly.
Intriguing!
It all started during the heavy snowfalls last year. "I got really frustrated at the bad press teachers were getting [for school closures]," said David Mitchell, the school's deputy head. "I threw out an idea about hosting online lessons."

The school texted all the pupils' parents saying there would be online lessons while they were kept at home. On the school website a blogging platform had been set up and soon most pupils were busily blogging in response to requests to go out into their back garden and report on the depth of the snow. "Blogging was cool and fulfilling," said Mr Mitchell. "After this there was no looking back."
Isn’t it nice to hear about a teacher using their initiative for once?
The school set up links internationally with other schools allowing their children to exchange blogs with places as far apart as Canada and Australia. It also introduced a "blog of the week" prize for the most exceptional piece of writing.
Incidentally, if anyone’s a long-time reader and is getting a hint of déjà vu from this, well, yes. It’s not as innovative and new as the ‘Indy’ would have you believe.

Bev Humphrey was doing this in a Thamesmead school back in December 2009.
"It is now a part of everyday life and the way our pupils like to communicate," said Mr Mitchell. "They will produce their work in class and then quite happily and eagerly go home and do a blog. It's now cool to be writing – especially for the boys. It's the boys who were coming up with the 5,000-word articles first."
Long may it continue…
Ministers have ploughed millions of pounds into trying to solve the problem of boys' writing and reading standards, creating a "boys into books" scheme which introduced more fact-based books for boys to read in the classroom and a "reading champions" programme in which Premier League footballers spoke about their favourite books.

Neither, though, seem to have had as big an effect as the opportunity to blog at Heathfield primary school.
Money and a centrally-driven policy can’t, it seems, buy everything…

7 comments:

  1. Fantastic stuff.

    Cost to the public purse? Pretty much bugger all.

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  2. 5,000 word articles. Not even CCinZ/Samizdata's Paul Marks writes those!

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  3. You mean they haven't banned it on equality grounds yet?

    A-mazing.

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  4. Since I start bloging my eNgliSh are getting betterer and betterer.

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  5. " "boys into books" scheme which introduced more fact-based books for boys to read "

    Relearning the past again, as a lad I treasured two twin volumed sets of books c.1930s, one of which was called "10,000 things every boy should know". Fascinating, full of facts".

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  6. "Fantastic stuff."

    It really is nice to see a 'good news story' for once, isn't it?

    "5,000 word articles. Not even CCinZ/Samizdata's Paul Marks writes those!"

    Heh! We should see if we can get hold of one, and compare the vocabulary too... ;)

    "You mean they haven't banned it on equality grounds yet?"

    I must admit, I was reading it waiting for the other shoe to drop, and the inevitable whine that 'not everyone has access to a computer!'.

    But no. Encouraging!

    "Since I start bloging my eNgliSh are getting betterer and betterer."

    :D

    "Relearning the past again, as a lad I treasured two twin volumed sets of books c.1930s, one of which was called "10,000 things every boy should know". "

    I must admit, I had to conceal a shudder at what a modern 'educational specialist' would consider to be a book suitable for encouraging boys to read...

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  7. JuliaM, it was full of stuff about mountains and Clive of India and stars and Van Der Graaf Generators.

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