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Educational Resources - Blogging Lesson PlansLesson Plans for English Teachers - Writing Prompts and Encouraging Students to Write Outside of the Classroom...

How to Inroduce Blogging to Students

Welcome to Stage of Life's Educational Resource page.  This page is upated monthly as it provides free writing lesson plans for English and Creative Writing high school and college teachers, instructors and professors who are determined to help get their students writing out of the classroom.

Below you'll find curriculum ideas, lesson plans and other ideas on how you can use Stage of Life, a free blogging site, to get young people writing in the real world on real issues.

Some background first... 

Blogging is an incredibly powerful tool.  It is an immediate, responsive and community-driven channel that gives students' writing a voice and forum outside of the classrom.  In fact, a key component in how the founders of Stage of Life designed this portal was to provide teachers a no-cost, interactive, and simple platform through which writing curriculum centered on blogging could be used.

What is blogging?

To us, blogging is...

  • Personal reflections.
  • Mini-memoirs. 
  • Essays. 
  • But mostly...blogs are stories. 

Stories about the wisdom, lessons, joys and sorrows of everyday life.  Real-life stories.  And as we all know, everyone has a story to tell.

When we share our stories with others we realize how connected we really are.  We can learn from each other, challenge each other, question each other and receive feedback about our life stories. 

That is what our Stage of Life philosophy is all about:  Sharing stories about life. 

None of this could be more relevant now as students struggle to find a venue through which to express themselves in more than the four sentence limit on Facebook, a 100 character limit on Twitter, or the bane of many Language Arts instructors...mobile texting's influence on student writing.

The possibilities for educational experiences in our blogging format are limitless.  Our mission is to provide you a free, safe and reliable resource to engage your students and get their writing out of the classroom and into the real world.  Take your time and review the below lesson plans on how to incorporate blogging into your writing curriculum as we all work together on the campaign of getting students to write more (not less) outside of the classroom.

Blogging Lesson Plans
Blogging Lesson #1: The Basics

What Are the Basics of Blogging on Stage of Life?

At the heart of our site is writing, storytelling, sharing personal essays, blogging, submitting essay contests, posing questions, and receiving feedback (and hopefully some answers) to some of our most important life questions.

Let's take a look at each of these individual writing opportunities:

1) Our Monthly Student Writing Contests:

Student Writing Contest for high school and college studentsLooking for a good opportunity to get your high school and college students thinking about important / intelligent questions and practice essay writing and posting essays in a national online forum?  Each month Stage of Life features a new essay contest.  Essay topics, rules, and directions are posted on our site. 

Winners of the essay contests are often times asked to become
"Featured Bloggers" for the site.


2) Blogging:

High school bloggersEvery student can utilize Stage of Life to post personal essays and stories about their life.  Each month we will have writing suggestions (just check the home page). Students can post their own personal essays about the monthly topics suggested or they can post about other important topics in their lives.  If a student is particularlly talented or passionate about blogging for the site, they may be invited to become a “featured blogger.”

But let's ask an important question first...

Why should students blog? 

Read this article by Ali Hale about reasons to blog.

Students often times feel less intimidated by blogging than they do “journal assignments”.  If you have access to computers, students can actually do their journaling in blogging format.  The great thing about Stage of Life is their blogging can be as formal or informal as you want it to be.  Every post/essay submitted to this site will be archived in the student's profile, thus becoming an online journal of sorts, BUT in this journal, they will be posting in a real national forum where they can receive feedback about their work.

PROFILE EXAMPLE

This link above is Rebecca's profile.  Scroll down to view her archived essays/blogs/posts.  Stage of Life will become an online storage space for your student's writing...getting their voice out of the classroom.


3) Posting questions:

Asking Questions on Stage of LifeStudents can utilize Stage of Life to ask questions about any stage of life.  If a high school student has a question about searching for the perfect college, he / she can post that in the college stage and get a response from a college student’s perspective. 

This feature can become an online discussion web for your class.

 


4) Responding to other posts:

High School CommentsEach of the 10 stages of life have "Featured Bloggers" who post anywhere from once every few months to several times a month. Students can read posts in any stage of life and write responses to these posts.  These responses can be quick-writes or fully developed personal essays.

The goal is to get them reading and responding to writing.  This also creates discussion webs and allows the student to see what other people are writing about in “the real world” and to respond directly to the writers.

Blogging Lesson #2: Values & Beliefs

Share a story about your values & beliefs

Ask your students these questions (in this order) and take one or two class volunteers to share as you walk through the series:

  1. "What do you value the most in your life and why?"
  2. "In terms of hours spent in a day, what do you spend the most time doing?"
  3. "Now think about these two question together...does 'what you value most' in your life match with what 'you're spending the most time on?'  Why or Why Not?"
  4. "Finally, thinking about the value of time and the value of your beliefs, what do you think needs to change in order to prioritize your values so you can be a success in life?  How will you do this?"

Lesson Plan Writing AssignmentWriting Assignment/Homework:  As the instructor, post this question (or your own version of it) to Stage of Life (as one post) and give it your own unique headline.  Ask your class to find your Question (which will really be a series of questions) and to then comment to your post with their responses. 

You'll instantly start a discussion web for your entire class under your original post.  You'll be able to see each person's individual response.  Encourage your students to comment on each other's posts as well.  The entire web dialogue will be contained in one string.

Blogging Lesson #3: Reflection and Wisdom

No one ever told me...

Students are reflective by nature...when they have time to be.  But thanks to busy schedules and late nights doing homework, most may not realize that they have important advice inside their heads that they don't know even exists.  For instance, ask your students to think about the answer to the following question:

"If there was one thing about high school (or college) that I wish somebody would have told me, it was that__________________."

Based on the age/grade of the students, modify this question to suite your class.  Ex) If you are working with a 9th grade class, you could alter the question to reflect back on middle school or junior high. 

Take a few volunteers from class to share their stories.  Ask them for the reasons, experiences or background that inspired the advice/answer to the question.

Lesson Plan Writing AssignmentWriting Assignment/Homework:  As the instructor, either...

1)  Post this question on Stage of Life and ask your students to "comment" on it so their responses are contained within one dialogue string under your original post.  In this manner, you'll see all of individual pieces of advice from your class under you original post.

OR...

2)  Make this a larger story opportunity and ask your students to create their own story post on Stage of Life about the advice they would give to answer this question. 

Remember to ask your students to...

  • a) Be specific and give concrete details,
  • b) Come up with a creative headline to summarize the story/advice when they create their own story posting on the site, and
  • c) Most importnatly, keep in mind that the purpose of this exercise is that another student reading their post could personally benefit from the wisdom or experience that they share.  The possiblity of sharing the advice in a national venue like Stage of Life will certainly help another student at some future date.

As a wrap-up over the next day, perform an in-class discussion about some of the various posts/advice.

Blogging Lesson #4: Life Stage Interview

I want answers to...

As a spring board from the previous lesson, students are not only reflective and good at giving advice, but they are also extremely curious. 

FACT:  During Stage of Life's start-up phase, the website saw thousands of student visitors spend an equal amount of time in their "home stage," e.g. high school, as they did in future life stages.  It was an interesting trend.  For instance, nearly every high school student peeks ahead into the College, On My Own, and/or Having a Baby stages simply because those are life milestones on the radar. 

With this curiosity in mind (and the ability to use Stage of Life as a crystal ball into the future), ask your class to...

Write down two questions about life after high school (or college) that they really want the answers to.  You may want to write the ten stages of life on the board to help spur their thinking process about the future (look at our menu running across the top of the website to help with the stage of life milestones) .

Lesson Plan Writing AssignmentWriting Assignment/Homework: 

1)  Ask your students to write down the names of two or more people that they know from their circle of friends, family, church or community who might be able to answer their two questions AND are in a DIFFERENT STAGE OF LIFE from the student, e.g. an older sister, a grandparent, etc.

2)  Students must then conduct personal interviews with the "experts" they've identified either in-person, by phone, email or Stage of Life*.  Again, these interview candidates must be in a different stage of life from your students.

3)  Your students then write up two separate summaries of the two interviews.  These summaries should include key thoughts as to what they learned through the process of each interview (making sure to include their questions and their interviewee's responses). 

4)  As a final step, the students should then post the summary on Stage of Life.  The catch to this last part is that they should post their interview story in the stage of life that pertained to their question and the interviewee.  For instance, if the student interviewed an older sister who is about to get married, the post should be posted in the "Wedding" stage.  Encourage your students to craft a unique headline that summarizes the advice given to them for each story.

For in-class follow-up, ask the students to present or share in small groups their stage of life interview experiences, responses, lessons learned, etc.

*A variation of this lesson would be to ask your students to post the question on Stage of Life in the stage of life to which it applies and then email the link to their interview contact asking them to comment on their question to answer it.  The student and the interviewee can then exchange responses through the post and comment process.

Blogging Lesson Plan #5: Food and Health

Our relationship with food...

Young people are frustrated by the obesity program in America.  To start a dialogue on this topic, Stage of Life asked this question during its July 2010 writing contest...

“Do we have an obligation to take better care of ourselves by making changes in the way we eat and/or buy and consume food?"

Students from all 50 states visited the contest page and scores of teens submitted their essays.  You can visit the writing contest page to read the essays from winner and finalists, but what we realized is that this conversation shouldn't end with the writing contest. 

When popular TV shows like NBC's Biggest Loser pull in millions of viewers, books like Michael Pollan's Food Rules fly off the shelves, and independent film documentaries like Food, Inc. and Super Size Me push the conversation of America's unhealthy relationship with food into the mainstream consciousness, we know we have an obligation to continue the conversation through our blogging lesson plan initiative.

Start a discussion with your class centered around this question...

Food and the traditions around food play an incredibly important role in our lives.  Read almost any play, short story or novel and there will be key sections that deal with food.  Oliver Twist's famous line, "Please, sir, may I have some more?" is a perfect example.  Keeping this literary point of view in mind, consider the following lesson to get your students writing and thinking about their relationship to food.

Lesson Plan Writing Assignment - FoodWriting Assignment/Homework: 

1)  Ask your students to chronicle what they eat for each meal for a week.  While doing this, ask them to write down observations about how their family interacts with food too.  For instance, does Dad skip breakfast before work?  Are siblings eating the same meal for dinner or is "everyone on their own?"  Once the weekly menu has been recorded, ask your students to self-evaluate and circle or highlight the meals they consider "unhealthy." 

2)  Throughout the week, as they are recording their specific, daily meals and snacks, ask your students to start a blog thread on Stage of Life that addresses their specific family traditions centered around food.  For instance, they could write a story about food the family eats during particular holidays, going into detail by describing the process of how their mother, grandmother, father, or other family member prepares the meal.  Or they could submit an essay about the meal they pick each year for their birthday, why they pick it, who makes it and how it makes them feel.  Or maybe there's a regional dish one of their parents prepares during a particular time of year...for instance our curriculum consultant, Rebecca, grew up eating blue crabs from Baltimore steamed by her father and seasoned with Old Bay every summer.  Or ask them to write an essay that desribes the perfect family meal.  Where would it be?  What would they eat?  What would the conversation at the table be about?

This purpose of this section of the homework assignment is to get students thinking about family traditions and times when food plays an integral and central role...versus the daily, on-the-go, fast-food-me-now meals that many teens consume as they juggle school work, jobs, and extracurricular activities. 

As a supplemental part of the essays being written over the week, ask students to comment on their classmates' Stage of Life food blogs.  Students will find both commonalities and exciting differences among friends in the class as discussions about food traditions are exchanged via the blog threads.

3)  With the blogs and essays written and the weekly menu completed, set aside time to watch either Super Size Me or Food, Inc. in class (you may subsititute other films that center around food based on how you customize this lesson).

4)  As the last assignment, have the students write a reaction paper (in-class or additional homework) that incorporates all of the pieces of this lesson...

  • Their weekly meal log
  • The family food traditions blogs and essays
  • Comments from classmates during discussions or from the blog threads
  • Film insights from Super Size Me or Food, Inc.

The reaction paper should address larger, thematic questions from the lesson, i.e. what was the big, take-away "ah-ha" moment from this experience?  What did you learn about yourself and the way you live or would like to live?  What changes will you make in how you interact with food?  And getting back to our original question...

“Do we have an obligation to take better care of ourselves by making changes in the way we eat and/or buy and consume food?"

Education and Writing Consultant

 

Contact Rebecca - Stage of Life blogging consultantThe above lesson plans were developed by Rebecca Thiegs, M.Ed. 

She is the resident, educational consultant for Stage of Life and welcomes feedback on this Language Arts blogging curriculum; in particular, which parts worked best for you.

Becky Thiegs, M.Ed

Rebecca earned her Masters of Education from the University of Minnesota and has spent the last 12 years teaching high school English, Language Arts, Creative Writing and Public Speaking in a wide range of schools from an urban setting in Minneapolis to an affluent suburb of Philadelphia to a rural, small town in York County, PA.  In addition to her high school teaching career, Rebecca was a senior curriculum consultant for McDaniel College as part of the their Summer Enrichment Program through a partnership with the DC Success Foundation, an initiatived supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.  She's lived in London England, been published (one of her own blog essays from Stage of Life was recently published in Central Penn Parent Magazine), and is the passionate mother of two.  Rebecca is available to speak or consult on educational needs and in particular, getting writing out of the classroom.  You can contact her here.

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