Strategies for Teaching with Online Tools
Bedford Workshops on Teaching Writing Online
Nick Carbone, New Media Consultant
Bedford/St. Martin's
ncarbone@bedfordstmartins.com
 Workshop Home
Tools 

E-Mail
 
Discussion Boards
 
File Sharing
 
Real-Time Discussions
 

Topics 


Peer Review
 
Research
 
Plagiarism
 
Workload
 

Composition@Bedford/St. Martins

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Online Discussion Boards

Online discussion boards are standard in course tools, and many free, and/or inexpensive incarnations exist on the WWW. Because these are WWW based tools, they require people to go to them and log in. Like e-mail discussion lists, they can be used in a variety of ways, and you can ask students to join boards outside of class. For example, news and other large WWW sites that get lots of traffice usually have active discussion boards. Slate's Fray, for example, features hundreds of messages a week per article. UTNE Reader's Cafe UTNE is well known for it's relatively civil discussions.

Ideas for In-Class Use of Discussion Boards
  1. When you place a reading on reserve at the library, have students use a discussion board to post their responses or notes on the reading. Since most all libraries have computers, students can do this in the library as they read.
  2. Use the discussion board during class as way for students to write and post responses to writing prompts (which you can post in the board in advance).
  3. Put text you want students to read in a message; ask students to use the reply key and to quote the original message--the text you posted. They can insert comments and annotations in the text.
  4. Have students copy and paste drafts of their writing in a board. Create separate strands for peer review groups or study groups. They can reply and comment on one another's paper.
  5. Create a discussion board devoted to sharing research sources. Require students to post full citations for a source they discovered an annotation or abstract to go with it.
Question to Consider
In class, we have strategies for generating discussions. Textbooks come with discussion questions and ancillaries and instructor editions offer even more questions. But those questions are premised on a teacher posing it in class and being able to tease out responses to get the discussion rolling.
 
But how do you do that online?
What are some strategies people have used to get discussions going in web based discussion boards or on class email lists?
What are some of the things that make this a challenge?