I’ve signed up to participate in National Blog Posting Month (see the little dealy in the side bar on the right?), so I now have absolutely nothing to write about, naturally. I suppose it seems reasonable to blog about blogging in general as an official kickoff off NaBloPoMo (not a portmanteau of my own devising, I assure you).
Since I seldom write about My Life Prior to Homeschooling™ here, I’m sure I haven’t mentioned that I used to be a part of a NCLB-funded grant program, run through the journalism department of my local university, that involved teaching middle and high school teachers how to blog and integrate blogging into their classrooms. My job was to actually teach the teachers how to set up their blogs and give suggestions as to how they could use them. I helped set up student blogs. I encouraged developing a blogging community between teachers, both interschool and intraschool. Unfortunately, most of the teachers were unwilling to exert the kind of effort needed to use the blog effectively, and the project tended to fizzle out by the end of each school year, leaving us to start from scratch with the next year’s batch of teachers. After two years of this, I decided not to re-up as a contractor with the program.
During that time, however, I did develop a huge appreciate for the role blogging could play in education, both for teachers and for students. Now that I am homeschooling, I find blogging to be a useful tool in several ways, as an outlet for emotion, a mean of recording experiences, a networking opportunity, and on down the line.
So, why should homeschoolers blog? Here are some ways that blogging may be helpful to you as a homeschooler:
These are just a few suggestions of ways to use your blog as a tool to help make your homeschooling experience better. I’m sure you can think of many more. How do you use your homeschooling blog?
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I agree with all of it, but especially the last point. Forcing our brains to craft a piece of writing, no matter how unpolished, is a Good Thing.
I agree with everything you have here. I’ve been blogging for five years. I enjoy looking back at old pictures and thoughts I’ve had. Sometimes it makes me smile; other times I cringe.
That comment was supposed to go under the general blog post.
I have only recently started blogging on a regular basis…my brain was turning to mush. It has been fun trying to find some creativity hidden in my brain somewhere.
Avoidance of mush is possibly one of my biggest motivators to blog. I have a MA in professional writing/editing and a respectable curriculum vitae, yet now that I’ve had baby #3, I find it difficult to eke out any creativity — I’ve taken a hiatus from freelancing because I just can’t DO it right now. Blogging at least keeps that part of my brain active enough that I’m not completely losing it whilst those mothering hormones are running rampant through my body!
Great post!!! I teach a lot of homeschoolers how to blog! If anyone would like to join the next course of Blogging 101, a beginning course for bloggers, you can head over to blogwritingcourse.com and get signed up!!
great post, I agreed with all of it and was nodding my head at the parts about community building, saving your sanity and keeping your brain from turning to mush. I think the last one is my biggest reason for blogging, it’s my only creative outlet right now in this very busy season of my life.