Blogging Journeys Evolving personal narratives, stories, reflections, and perspectives GLENN GROULX.

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Presentation transcript:

Blogging Journeys Evolving personal narratives, stories, reflections, and perspectives GLENN GROULX

Crossing Paths, Crossing Rivers

Blogging Life-Streams Formal Learning Personal Hobbies and Interests Professional

Blogging as Transitioning

Blogging as Liminality “betwixt and between” blogging implies a constantly shifting relationship between the author and the written text blogging gives rise to tentative, provisional output blogging enables changes of mind Blogging captures an individualized shifting of “signature” and “persona”

Reflecting on Oneself and Others

Blogging as Self-Reflection “carving out private discursive spaces for contemplation” Creating both “stilled reflections of life, as well as constructing life” Retrieving, revisiting, reviewing and revising earlier posts sparks transformative growth

Blogging as Diarying Diarying serves a number of personal needs: – Confessional “le journal intime”(Didier) – Therapeutic – Chronicle – Scrapbook – Notebooks Diarying NOT a “private” genre, but preferred by private people (want the content secure, but addressing an audience – even of one)

Blogging as Epistolary Narratives Joint diaries of transient, outlier groups Letters are semi-public Letters tell a serialized, unfolding story from different characters’ perspectives Role-playing, rehearsing, remembering

Blogs as Captured Dialogues Ego-documents (revisits of past, reified memories) Joint diaries (communal sharing) Educational biographies (perspective transformation; use in PLAR) Portfolios (summative assessment) Story-telling (play-building)

Blogging as Social Rituals Collective means of expression to record and exchange spiritual and intellectual journeys to each other Communicating beliefs, values, and knowledge across time and space with like- minded audiences

Blogging as Performance Blogging includes an addressee, and involves an act of communication towards: – Imaginary friends – World at large – God – Oneself in past, present or future – The mirrored “Other” – The imagined self

Challenges for Student Bloggers Engaging in creating personal educational biographies Synchronizing one’s ideas with others Testing evaluations and impressions Engaging more comfortably in active self- disclosure Resolving confusion over expectations of transparency, reciprocal exchange and addressivity Strengthening ties by swapping resources

BLOGGING ACTIVITIES Building and Sharing Blogging Profiles Swapping Experiences with Way-Making Select, Collect and Contribute Links to Tools, Experts, and Bookmarks Engaging in Cooperative Sense-Making Reflective Summaries

Sharing and Building Blogging Profiles 1.Learners develop their profiles as a learner and explain what they would like to do with their blogs, and what skills they would like to develop. 2.Learners read and reflect on the profiles of others – which are similar, and which are quite different.

Swap Experiences with Way-Making 1.Learners swap best ways to find useful bloggers and resources online, and describe the content of the expert blogs and sites in a series of blog posts. 2.Learners describe how others’ blogs (peers, expert bloggers, instructor) have influenced their blogging activities.

Select, Collect and Contribute Links to Tools, Experts, and Bookmarks 1.Learners share their initial hit and miss activities online while searching for useful resources 2.Learners summarize and annotate useful resources, posting summaries and reviews for peers as bookmarks, links and RSS Feeds

Engaging in Cooperative Sense- Making 1.Learners document their selection, drafting and writing process 2.Posts containing unrefined ideas are shared through short snippets – include self- questioning, working notes, and links to both active and dormant content 3.Posts build on and weave together various sources (one’s own earlier posts, feedback from instructor and peers, resources, articles, etc.)

Reflective Summaries 1.Learners look back at own postings, and compare to expert bloggers, peers, and instructor’s posts; 2.Learners reflect on challenges, lessons learned, skills and knowledge gaps, and positive experiences as well as frustrations; 3.Learners read and comment on peers’ reflections to apply to their own future blogging practice

“Blogging itself becomes a (real life) experience, a construction of self that is always mediated by tools for communication and experience.” Jose van Dijck, Composing the Self: Of Diaries and Lifelogs, 2004, page 8; URL:

Questions and Discussion Glenn Groulx Twitter: Literacy Blog: EduBlog: