Title: Blogging as Change:
Transforming Science
and Math Education
through
New Media Literacies
Authors : Raffaella Borasi, April Luehmann
Publisher: Peter Lang Publishing
Pages : 368
ISBN : 13: 978-1433105586
Price : $149.95
Blogs and other Web 2.0 technologies are rarely being used in schools in the powerful ways they are taken up outside of school—in ways that position learners as producers of their own knowledge. These radically different engagements in new media literacies are even more rare in science and math classrooms, but a research team from the University of Rochester's Warner School of Education has recently released a book to help practitioners and researchers discover the true power of blogging in science and math education.
Transforming Science
and Math Education
through
New Media Literacies
Authors : Raffaella Borasi, April Luehmann
Publisher: Peter Lang Publishing
Pages : 368
April Luehmann, associate professor, and Raffaella Borasi, Frederica Warner Professor of Education, the co-editors of Blogging as Change: Transforming Science and Math Education Through New Media Literacies believe that blogging can support classrooms in realizing reform-based science and math education. Blogging can promote authentic engagement in learning and teaching and contribute to a much-needed transformation of science and math education so that all students, especially those historically marginalized from participating in their school-based education, are involved in doing the real work of science and mathematics.
The book was inspired from Luehmann's own practice as a teacher educator as well as years of studies on part of her research team on the use of blogs in a number of different instructional contexts. The 14 chapters in Blogging as Change, which were written collaboratively by Luehmann and her graduate students as well as Borasi, illustrate and critically analyze the potential of blogging to encourage different ways of communicating, interacting, learning, and thinking about science and math.
The book focuses on two different, yet valuable, forms of blogging. The first is classroom blogging, where blogging practices are introduced and often designed by teachers, and taken up and often customized by students. Classroom blogging can engage students more centrally in their own learning and in ways that transform their identities in science and math. The second is teacher blogging, where teachers develop professional blogs as a tool to support professional learning. The book looks at the power of blogging not only to foster new modes of interactions in the classroom through classroom blogs but also as a tool to support teachers' reflection, introspection, meaning-making, community-building, and growth through new forms of digitally-supported communication.
Courtesy :Review written by Theresa Danylak in the website of Rochester University.
Link: http://www.rochester.edu
Link:
very nice article . teachers should make children aware about importance of blogging but first they have to start writng.
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