Instructional Models for Using Weblogs In eLearning: Case Studies from a Hybrid and Virtual Course
        
        
        
			- By J. David  Betts, Stuart J. Glogoff
- 08/02/04
During the past academic year, faculty members at the University of Arizona 
  have integrated blogging into their courses. The courses have been offered either 
  totally online or as hybrid instruction where students met in a traditional 
  classroom environment but other coursework and communication occurred virtually. 
  Blogs were used in conjunction with other instructional technology tools such 
  as a learning management system, threaded discussion forums, e-mail, and chat 
  rooms. At the end of the course, students completed surveys to assess their 
  use of blogs for skills acquisition as well as their general acceptance of this 
  technology. This article presents models for using blogs and offers recommendations 
  for faculty who are considering using blogs in their courses.
Introduction
  
In recent years, the professional literature has been filled with calls for 
  faculty to better engage students in learner-centered applications. Reports 
  on the learning and behavioral tendencies of the Network Generation1 
  and most recently of the Millennials2 emphasize that these students 
  have grown up in the information age with technology, and have developed skills, 
  aptitudes and attitudes that differ from many faculty active in instruction. 
  For example, the Millenials look to the Internet for information and 
  are comfortable interacting online with their peers; they work collaboratively 
  and thrive on interactivity; and they have an expectation of immediacy not just 
  in problem-solving and knowledge acquisition but from their instructors as well. 
  What pedagogical models might faculty design that cater to self-directed learners? 
  A first step toward developing models of scholarship aligned to innovative teaching 
  is to pilot approaches that blend technology with the skill sets being developed 
  in core subject areas. As best practices are identified, they can be incorporated 
  into revised pedagogical models.
Blogging and Instructional Techniques for eLearning
In their book eLearning and the Science of Instruction: Proven Guidelines 
  for Consumers and Designers of Multimedia Learning, Ruth Colvin-Clark and 
  Richard E. Mayer identified three instructional techniques for eLearning:
  - Receptive: information acquisition
- Directive: response strengthening
- Guided Discovery: knowledge construction3
The receptive technique emphasizes acquiring information and involves 
  building instructional modules that open avenues to greater amounts of information 
  while limiting application and experimentation. In contrast to this, the directive 
  technique emphasizes frequent responses from learners with immediate feedback 
  from the instructor. Guided discovery places the instructor in the role 
  of expert who leads students toward solving real-life challenges and identifying 
  the appropriate "conceptual codecs" to support student knowledge acquisition. 
  Blogging is a simple technology that can be used to construct learning environments 
  that fulfill these three instructional techniques.
The Hybrid Experience
Learning, Reading and Culture (LRC551) was taught as a hybrid course 
  through the College of Education. LRC551, Reading, Writing and Text, addressed 
  "readers and writers as users of language; reading and writing as language 
  processes; and what makes a text a text." It drew students from the College 
  of Education, Department of Linguistics, and a specialized program called Second 
  Language Acquisition and Teaching (SLAT). SLAT is an interdisciplinary doctoral 
  program designed to provide advanced training for researchers, teachers, and 
  administrators concerned with second language acquisition and teaching.
A blog was introduced as a formative experiment to give students a way to experience 
  so-called "New Literacies" and to help build a classroom community 
  of learners. It was used for class assignments, reflections, and journal entries. 
  In addition, the blog served to extend discussions between class meetings and 
  helped in collaborations. Many students used it often for course activities: 
  literacy inventories, such as lists, purposive reading, observation notes, and 
  linguistic analysis. Other students brought in ideas, terminology and methodology 
  from their other courses. Many were coming directly from their own classroom 
  and brought issues from that environment. Students used their blogs to chronicle 
  the development of their class projects, which they also regularly presented 
  in class. These students for the most part knew what their classmates were working 
  on and bringing to the class. The blog was discussed during class time so aspects 
  of the class as a community were present in a more obvious way. We observed 
  ways in which the experience affected the relationships among readers, writers, 
  and text.
A Virtual Course Environment
During the summer of 2003, Decision Making for Information Professionals 
  (IRLS613) was a virtual course offered in the University of Arizona School of 
  Information Resources and Library Science. IRLS613 emphasizes an understanding 
  of the various technologies and systems utilized by information professionals 
  to make informed decisions when recommending a system for purchase or use by 
  a client. Approximately thirty students, dispersed from Alaska to Ohio and California 
  to New Mexico, were enrolled. Some students already were working in libraries 
  in a staff or professional capacity; others came from different disciplines, 
  such as education. Ages ranged from early twenties to early fifties. The one 
  common thread was that all were working towards a Master's degree in the same 
  discipline. The characteristics attributed to the Network Generation and Millenniums- 
  facility with online interaction, preference for rich and immediate collaboration, 
  expectation of faculty in the role of problem solving "guides" more 
  than "experts"- simply did not apply.
Blogs were used in IRLS613 to share learning experiences, provide feedback 
  to the instructor and fellow students, and to demonstrate an understanding of 
  particular learning principles developed during the course. Sharing information 
  about new technology was at the heart of the Technology News blog.
In Technology 
  News, students made direct observations of uses of technology, provided summaries 
  with links to complete articles, and added entries relevant to their discipline 
  or personal interests. The IRLS613 blog was initially intended for postings 
  that could help students use the course's different instructional resources. 
  It evolved into a blog where students posted entries about topics of interest 
  and serves as an example of a virtual community in practice because these changes 
  were derived totally by student actions addressing a perceived need.
Survey Results
LRC551
  The survey used was an informal instrument to see how the blog was viewed as 
  a part of this course. Thirteen students (of 17 present) responded to a survey 
  that was distributed on the last night of class with the University Student 
  Evaluation Forms for the course. Most respondents had not had experience in 
  Web publishing. Only one person indicated that she had participated in "something 
  like a blog" before. Six individuals indicated that they wanted to continue 
  using blog551, although in point of fact, no messages were posted the following 
  semester. Responding to a question about whether they would use a blog in a 
  future class (either teaching or taking), five said "yes," and three 
  indicated "maybe." Students in LRC551 were asked what they liked most 
  about using the LRC551 blogs. Comments included: "It was an opportunity 
  to participate," it was "easily accessible" and "user friendly." 
  The blog "extended class discussions 
without taking class time." 
  It was a "'safe' way to participate." One student noted that she liked 
  being able to "participate in writing, not necessarily verbally." 
  Asked how they might use a blog themselves, responses included: "as a journal," 
  "for notes," and "to post examples." One student wrote that 
  she saw it as a way to introduce "new technology as a way to study new 
  literacies." Another suggested using blogs as "a way for scholars 
  to discuss articles." Several mentioned that it could be a "place 
  for students" that could promote "interactivity." A small number 
  of students were negative on the value of blogging as a good way to learn or 
  to participate in class. One student wrote that blogs invaded her privacy.
IRLS613
  The end-of-course survey revealed that although the vast majority (95 percent) 
  of students responding were novice blog users, 90 percent agreed that the "Technology 
  News Web log was a good way for me to learn more about technology." Twenty-nine 
  percent reported that they joined another blog since the course began, 70 percent 
  of the students planned to join at least one blog in the coming six months, 
  and 76 percent "would like to continue using the Technology News Web log." 
  One student commented that the best thing about using a blog was its "casual 
  sharing of information." She wrote: "I almost got the feeling I was 
  sitting in a coffee shop somewhere and the person next to me poring over the 
  newspaper casually said, 'Hey, did you hear about this new thing that just came 
  out
?'" This is the sort of sense of place that we do not realize 
  fully with threaded discussion forums, e-mails and chatrooms.
Faculty Observations and Recommended Next Steps
Betts
  I found the blogs to have a great deal of potential for making more of an integrated 
  experience of the weekly graduate course. Those students who authored lengthy 
  blog entries but generally did not talk in class were particularly interesting. 
  The ways students used blogs was also enlightening. Some submitted almost all 
  of their assignments on their blog. Others included attached files and some 
  used the blogs as an extended entry gate. We started the blog as an experiment 
  related to the subject of the class, New Literacies, and we ended up actively 
  participating in them. 
Most of my students are teachers and I am very interested in helping them put 
  these new affordances to work in their classrooms. A student in my seminar established 
  a blog for her eighth grade English classes the following semester. Starting 
  from scratch, and dealing with her school and district and limited on-site support, 
  she wasn't completely successful. However, she reported that she was able to 
  establish a Web-based presence for one class by using NiceNet (www.nicenet.org). 
  She created an author study research assignment and provided the threaded discussion 
  tool for students to publish and read their work. The students who used the 
  Web tool "had a higher level of assignment completions." Like me, 
  she plans to try it again next year. The next time I teach LRC 551, I will organize 
  it a little differently. By assigning weekly blog reading and response at the 
  beginning of the semester, I hope to get people using blogs as they work on 
  their collaborative projects and share resources. I would like my students to 
  use blogs to give their students authentic literacy experience, and for classroom 
  community-building.
Glogoff
  Blogging is a tool well-suited for decision making sciences because it can be 
  constructed to emphasize declarative or procedural forms of knowledge, where 
  learners either come to know the basic knowledge schemas of the discipline or 
  describe how to apply their knowledge. Because the students taking the course 
  came from different disciplines and professional backgrounds, there is potential 
  to attract interest from a wider audience of teaching faculty in whose disciplines 
  information acquisition, response strengthening and knowledge construction are 
  important. 
Faculty considering using blogs should weigh whether individual student blogs 
  should be assigned, or if "community" blogs will serve the purpose. 
  My observation from the Summer 2003 course was that far too many students lurked 
  rather than participated, even though participation was required and points 
  towards the final grade were assigned based upon the quality of ones participation. 
  During Summer 2004, each student in the course has been assigned a blog and 
  is required to post on assigned topics each week. My goal is for this technique 
  to strengthen participation and draw the more reluctant bloggers into stronger 
  information gathering practices.
1 Tapscott, Don. Growing Up Digital: The Rise of the Network Generation. 
  New York & London: McGraw-Hill, c. 1998.
2 Oblinger, Diana. "Boomers, Gen-Xers, and Millennials: Understanding 
  the 'New Students,'" Educause Review (July/August) 2003, p. 37-47.
3 Clark, Ruth Colvin, and Mayer, Richard E. (2003) eLearning and 
  the Science of Instruction: Proven Guidelines for Consumers and Designers of 
  Multimedia Learning. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass/Pfeiffer, p. 28.