Blogging in the classroom can increase students' knowledge by allowing them to share information, videos, and pictures with other students and people online. Students today are generally comfortable with digital tools and may already be familiar with blogging. Blogging has little learning curve for students. When blogging, students need to express their creativity carefully and ensure their content is clear without discussing inappropriate topics. Blogging first became popular in the 1990s as a way for people to share their thoughts and experiences online.
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Blog in the classroom
1. BLOG IN THE CLASSROOM
The blogging in the classroom are a tool that we use to express
knowledge about various items, one blogging these can add videos, pictures,
information can increase our knowledge and give them to meet different friends,
people who have added to our website and also items that add the public placed
so that all people have access.
The latest generation of students, being comfortable digital natives, by and
large, is well-positioned to reap numerous rewards from blogging-related
activities in the classroom. Perhaps, before any classroom blogs are operational,
students will already be familiar with the blogging world. Perhaps they are
readers, and have lists of their favorite blogs saved on computers at home. The
chances of this are good, but even if the students are total newcomers, one
advantage of blogging becomes clear from the very beginning. There is
essentially no learning curve.
In the blog we can express great creativity to create, to dazzle the
expectations of the people who see our website, but we have to be careful that
we are building and we are talking about, we can talk about something that does
not contain another topic, has some similarities exist, to express our article
clearly.
Blogging—which first started to take off in the latter half of the 1990s—
was initially used to provide a unique way for people to share their thoughts,
feelings, experiences, and opinions. (wikipedia) ((Jorn Barger and Mollie Crie)
Ana MarÃa Manzano GarcÃa.