Ever since I was a little girl, I have always wanted to be a teacher. I loved pretending to have my own classroom and make my family be my students. I would teach them lessons and then make them do homework assignments. In my family, education is extremely important. My parents always encouraged (and expected) us to do well in school. I looked up to my mom as one of my biggest role models. She was a teacher and occasionally, I would get to go to school with her. She would let me play with her students when I was younger, and let me read with them and help them with assignments when I was older. These experiences only solidified my goal of becoming a teacher.
Throughout my schooling, my parents were always very involved. They would volunteer in my classrooms, provide supplies for my teachers, and go to every school event. At home, they were the same way. They would ask me about my day, and then pull out my folder to do my homework with me. Even before I was in school, we would practice reading, writing, and math skills. We had flashcards and whiteboards and books that we would work with daily. The involvement of my parents made me want that type of involvement for my students.
Flash forward to now, where I am a first grade teacher, living my dream and loving it. However, one thing that always made me a little nervous was parents. I was always stressed about parent teacher conferences and worried about a parent email. This made it more difficult for me to communicate with my student's families, which, in turn, hindered them. I wanted to provide my students and their families with as many opportunities as they were willing to take to feel like part of the classroom and do what they can to support their child's learning. This leads to my why.I believe students learn best when all of the people in their lives are on the same page, working together to support them. Based on this belief, I have decided to create a class blog for my students' families to access. Within this blog, I will post weekly updates. In these updates, I will include the skills we are learning, upcoming events, reminders, and resources. Creating this all in one space allows families to have one location to get all of the information they need about their child's learning. I also plan to use this as a space to share photos with families. They will be able to see their children completing assignments and engaging in collaborative work.
This blog will be used through blogger.com, the same blogging site used in this class. While I have used blogger prior to this class, creating a new class blog allowed me to explore some new features of the site that I had not used before. One of these features is the layout of the blog. Through experimentation, trial and error, and simply clicking around, I was able to create a layout that made the most sense for the purpose of the blog. I was able to create side bars with links to different resources that families would need access to. I also experimented with the themes and determined what theme would make the most sense for my blog. As I continue working on this throughout the summer and into the school year, I am sure that there will be many more elements that I will play around with and incorporate into the blog.
Through creating this blog, I have determined that I will need to conduct introductory sessions or record videos on how to use the blog. These sessions and videos will be for parents and family members to learn more about the different features of the blog and how to use it to best support their children. In reading the text from Boyd, I learned that we cannot expect everyone to automatically know how to use technology. The idea of "digital natives" and "digital immigrants," while off putting, reminds us that technology is not something that everyone has known or has had access too, adults and children included. I cannot expect my students to be able to show their parents how to navigate the blog. Most of them have probably never seen a blog before, so it would not make sense for me to assume that they could help their family members figure out how to use it. "Rather than focusing on coarse generational categories, it makes more sense to focus on the skills and knowledge that are necessary to make sense of a mediated world. Both youth and adults have a lot to learn" (Boyd 180). In creating tutorials for families, I can help ensure that they have full access to the tools that are going to best support their child's learning journey.
This project has made me think about Sherry Turkle's thoughts on technology in her TedTalk, "Connected, but alone?" Turkle talked a lot about how technology has a psychological power over us, which causes people to constantly be on their devices. While in some instances this may be true, our society has transformed into one that has had to rely on technology to connect with one another through a pandemic. These circumstances opened many doors for technology and has allowed education to be transformed. Teachers learned about new ways to engage students through online activities. The creation of a blog, to Turkle, may seem like another way to avoid in person connection, when in reality, it opens the door to new types of connections. Through this blog, I will be able to connect with families who may not have the means to come to after school events, or have the option to pick up their child from school and ask me about something. The blog will be a way for me to convey information to my students' families in a way that is easily accessible to them. In her talk, Turkle says, "we expect more from technology and less from each other" (12:00). However, in creating this blog, there will be a mutual expectation between myself and families. They will be expecting me to keep the blog up to date so they can stay connected to their child's learning, and I will be expecting them to use the blog for the same reasons. In this instance, we will be expecting more from each other. Teachers and families need to work as a team to support students, and this blog will be one way to do that. This course really allowed me to unpack my why and my beliefs about teaching. I have been able to engage in text analysis and gain a new perspective on technology in the classroom, and in the world. Based on Scott Noon's framework for teachers assimilating to technology, I believe I am teetering on the line between electronic traditionalist and techno-constructivist. I am very comfortable using technology in the classroom, but it has mainly been by taking paper assignments and making them digital. However, I believe I am close to the techno-constructivist educator as I also use some technological resources that support the curriculum in a new way. I believe that my classroom blog will help to launch me into the techno-constructivist world.In an ever changing, technologically savvy world, it is easy to fall into the idea of allowing technology to take over the education of our students. However, if technology becomes our educators, how will parents and families stay involved? In his TedTalk, "A School in the Cloud," Sugata Mitra shares his ideas about creating a "school in the cloud." In this school, teachers will act as facilitators. They will pose a question, and students will use technology to find the answer and share their findings. This structure of learning is called SOLE (Self Organized Learning Environment). While there are elements of this form of schooling that would be beneficial, there are elements that would not. For example, giving students the opportunity to engage in self-guided learning would develop self-motivation and collaboration skills. However, to transfer the job of teacher to facilitator could put a damper on the home-school connection. As the facilitator, the teacher may be limited in how much they can find out about student's learning. Working in a group, some students may get lost in the shuffle, resulting in them not really learning, but rather just being pulled along. This results in teachers believing that a child is succeeding, when in reality, they could be drowning.
My beliefs about creating a connection with all of the people involved in a child's life creates a disconnect between Mitra's ideas about the "school in the cloud." How is the facilitator going to know if each child is understanding? How will they determine which students need extra support? And how will they communicate this information to families? While I think Mitra's ideas about SOLE could help students learn, there needs to be a balance. SOLE creates self-motivated and collaborating learners. This is an amazing result to this type of learning. However, for my students, this is not the only way learning should occur. Students should be engaged in small group, individualized instruction, as well as given independent assignments that assess their progress. The information gathered from all of these pieces will help to inform students' families about their progress.
This project has helped me put my beliefs about education into action. I have found a new way to create a connection with my students' families. This bond will create a better learning environment for my students, and help them realize that we are all on the same team. All of the people in their lives want to help them succeed, and this blog helps build the bridge between home and school.
Boyd, Danah. “Literacy: Are Today's Youth Digital Natives?” It's Complicated: The Social Lives of Networked Teens, Yale University Press, New Haven, 2015, pp. 176–198.
Mitra, Sugata. “Build a School in the Cloud.” Sugata Mitra: Build a School in the Cloud | TED Talk, https://www.ted.com/talks/sugata_mitra_build_a_school_in_the_cloud.
“Tedtalks: Sherry Turkle--Connected, but Alone?” 2013, Accessed 2022.















