Learning Journals
My suggestion about doing this is that you should
budget a half hour or so at some regular time every week to
write your reflection. I suggest writing it with a word
processor, saving it, and then posting it on the learning
journal blog. Here are some instructions for doing it the first
time.
Composing a learning
reflection
What to write? How to write it? The reflections
will be public, so soon you'll be able to see what other people
have done with this challenge. In the meantime, here are some
suggestions:
- Begin by summarizing what you've done so far in the term,
to remind yourself and to give a context for your reader.
- List one or two examples of things you've learned through
doing it that are more or less concrete -- for instance, if
you discovered something about online publications by
looking for an article, or if reading a forum posting from
someone else made you think of something you'd never have
thought of otherwise, or if you learned something about
managing your own time, you might quickly summarize that.
- List an example or two of things you're beginning to come
to understand, or connections you've made with what you
already know -- for instance, you might, by reading the
reports of other people, have come to a clearer
understanding of how word choices might make a difference to
a reader's understanding of, or feelings about, an event or
person or idea.
- The most powerful demonstration of learning you can
construct is the sort that shows you're able to do something
or understand something that you didn't before; so, for
example, you might apply what you learned to something new,
or explain how it changes what you knew before.
- In all cases, you should write, if you can, about the
process by which you came to learn or understand those
things.
Take a half hour or so to compose this. Don't dash it off
as a perfunctory note. Save this as a file -- Word, whatever --
before you post it.
Posting a learning
reflection
Like much else in Moodle, this is surprisingly
straightforward, but will probably not be a familiar process.
Here are the steps.
- Click on the link to "Learning
Journals" on the main course page.
- Click on "New blog post."
- For "Title" it would be best to give a reader a hint of
what you're going to say (your name, the fact that it's a
learning journal, and the date are all given anyway).
- Paste your composed text into the editing window.
- Edit your text to make sure it's formatted as you want
it.
- Click "Add blog post" down at the bottom.
That's it. Next time, you do exactly the same thing, and your
new post will appear above the old one.
Reading learning
reflections
As people post their own, there will be a pulldown
menu at the top, that will give you a list of "Visible
individual" blogs -- that is, a list of everyone who's posted a
journal; you can read any of them by clicking on the name.
I'll remind people regularly to read other
people's learning journals (I'll put a table
of links directly to them from the main course Web site).
What other people say counts as learning may be a surprise to
you, and you may discover that things they say suggest, or
remind you of, kinds of learning you hadn't thought of. This is
intended to be a process whereby your definition of what
constitutes learning grows and changes. That's part of my
intention in all my teaching: to help people become more aware
of when (and what) they're learning. It's not about accumulating
factual information.
Deadlines
You should do this once a week, whenever is
convenient for you. I advise setting a regular day and time for
it. I'll count them as done once a week, as of 2 am Monday
morning (that's Sunday night). So any time between one Sunday
night and the next will count as an entry for that week.